ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
An AI-native strategy firmGlobal Advisors: a consulting leader in defining quantified strategy, decreasing uncertainty, improving decisions, achieving measureable results.
A Different Kind of Partner in an AI World
AI-native strategy
consulting
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We are hiring experienced top-tier strategy consultants
Quantified Strategy
Decreased uncertainty, improved decisions
Global Advisors is a leader in defining quantified strategies, decreasing uncertainty, improving decisions and achieving measureable results.
We specialise in providing highly-analytical data-driven recommendations in the face of significant uncertainty.
We utilise advanced predictive analytics to build robust strategies and enable our clients to make calculated decisions.
We support implementation of adaptive capability and capacity.
Our latest
Thoughts
Podcast – The Real AI Signal from Davos 2026
While the headlines from Davos were dominated by geopolitical conflict and debates on AGI timelines and asset bubbles, a different signal emerged from the noise. It wasn’t about if AI works, but how it is being ruthlessly integrated into the real economy.
In our latest podcast, we break down the “Diffusion Strategy” defining 2026.
3 Key Takeaways:
- China and the “Global South” are trying to leapfrog: While the West debates regulation, emerging economies are treating AI as essential infrastructure.
- China has set a goal for 70% AI diffusion by 2027.
- The UAE has mandated AI literacy in public schools from K-12.
- Rwanda is using AI to quadruple its healthcare workforce.
- The Rise of the “Agentic Self”: We aren’t just using chatbots anymore; we are employing agents. Entrepreneur Steven Bartlett revealed he has established a “Head of Experimentation and Failure” to use AI to disrupt his own business before competitors do. Musician will.i.am argued that in an age of predictive machines, humans must cultivate their “agentic self” to handle the predictable, while remaining unpredictable themselves.
- Rewiring the Core: Uber’s CEO Dara Khosrowshahi noted the difference between an “AI veneer” and a fundamental rewire. It’s no longer about summarising meetings; it’s about autonomous agents resolving customer issues without scripts.
The Global Advisors Perspective: Don’t wait for AGI. The current generation of models is sufficient to drive massive value today. The winners will be those who control their “sovereign capabilities” – embedding their tacit knowledge into models they own.
Read our original perspective here – https://with.ga/w1bd5
Listen to the full breakdown here – https://with.ga/2vg0z

Strategy Tools
Strategy Tools: The 7S Framework – A Comprehensive Guide
By John Khova Global Advisors digital consultant Introduction The McKinsey 7S Framework is one of the most enduring and widely recognised management models in strategic consulting and organisational design. It posits that organisational effectiveness depends not on...
Fast Facts
Fast Fact: Great returns aren’t enough
Key insights
It’s not enough to just have great returns – top-line growth is just as critical.
In fact, S&P 500 investors rewarded high-growth companies more than high-ROIC companies over the past decade.
While the distinction was less clear on the JSE, what is clear is that getting a balance of growth and returns is critical.
Strong and consistent ROIC or RONA performers provide investors with a steady flow of discounted cash flows – without growth effectively a fixed-income instrument.
Improvements in ROIC through margin improvements, efficiencies and working-capital optimisation provide point-in-time uplifts to share price.
Top-line growth presents a compounding mechanism – ROIC (and improvements) are compounded each year leading to on-going increases in share price.
However, without acceptable levels of ROIC, the benefits of compounding will be subdued and share price appreciation will be depressed – and when ROIC is below WACC value will be destroyed.
Maintaining high levels of growth is not as sustainable as maintaining high levels of ROIC – while both typically decline as industries mature, growth is usually more affected.
Getting the right balance between ROIC and growth is critical to optimising shareholder value.
Selected News
Quote: Michael E Porter
“The underlying principles of strategy are enduring, regardless of technology or the pace of change.” – Michael E Porter – Harvard Professor
Michael E. Porter on Enduring Strategic Principles
Michael E. Porter’s assertion that underlying strategic principles remain constant despite technological disruption and market acceleration reflects his foundational belief that competitive advantage is rooted in timeless economic logic rather than operational trends1,3,5.
The Quote’s Foundation and Context
Porter developed this perspective across decades of research at Harvard Business School, culminating in frameworks that have become the intellectual foundation of business strategy globally1. The quote encapsulates a critical distinction Porter makes: while the methods and pace of business change dramatically with technological innovation, the fundamental logic of how organizations compete does not3,5.
This assertion emerges from Porter’s core definition of strategy itself: a plan to achieve sustainable superior performance in the face of competition5. Superior performance, Porter argues, derives from two immutable sources—either commanding premium prices or establishing lower cost structures than rivals—regardless of whether a company operates in a factory, a digital platform, or an emerging metaverse5. The underlying principle remains unchanged; only the execution vehicle evolves1.
Porter’s Revolutionary Framework: Three Decades of Influence
In the early 1980s, Porter proposed what would become one of business’s most enduring intellectual contributions: Porter’s Generic Strategies1. Rather than suggesting companies could succeed through luck or serendipity, Porter identified three distinct competitive postures—cost leadership, differentiation, and focus (later refined to four strategies when focus was subdivided)1,2.
What made Porter’s framework revolutionary was not merely its categorization but its insistence on commitment: a company must select one strategy and execute it exclusively1. This directly contradicted decades of conventional wisdom that suggested businesses should excel simultaneously at being cheap, unique, and specialized. Porter argued this “Middle of the Road” approach was inherently unstable and would result in competitive mediocrity1.
The principle underlying this strategic requirement transcends any particular era: focus and coherence create competitive strength; diffusion creates vulnerability1. This principle applied equally in 1982 (when Walmart exemplified cost leadership) and today, when digital-native companies must still choose whether to compete primarily on price or differentiation1,2.
The Deeper Logic: Value Chains and Competitive Forces
Porter’s subsequent work expanded this foundational insight through additional frameworks that reveal why strategic principles endure. His concept of the value chain—the sequence of activities through which companies create and deliver value—operates on a principle that transcends technology: every business must perform certain functions (sourcing materials, manufacturing, marketing, distribution, service) and can gain advantage by performing them better or more cost-effectively than rivals7.
When automation, digitalization, or artificial intelligence emerges, companies still must navigate this basic reality. Technology may transform how value chain activities are performed, but the principle that competitive advantage flows from superior execution of value-creating activities persists3,7.
Similarly, Porter’s Five Forces framework—analyzing competitive intensity through suppliers, buyers, substitutes, new entrants, and rivalry—identifies structural forces that shape industry profitability3,7. These forces remain economically relevant whether an industry faces disruption or stability. A startup entering a market still faces the fundamental dynamics of supplier bargaining power and threat of substitutes; technology changes the specifics, not the underlying logic3.
The Strategic Imperative: Trade-Offs and Distinctiveness
Central to Porter’s philosophy is the concept of strategic trade-offs—the recognition that choosing one competitive path necessarily means sacrificing others5. A company pursuing cost leadership must accept lower margins per unit and simplified offerings; a differentiation strategist must accept higher costs to fund innovation and premium positioning1,2,5.
This principle, too, transcends eras. The trade-off principle operated when Henry Ford chose standardized mass production over customization, and it operates today when Netflix chose streaming breadth over theatrical release control. Technology may change what trade-offs are possible, but the necessity of making meaningful choices endures5.
Porter identifies five tests for a compelling strategy, the most fundamental being a distinctive value proposition—a clear answer to why a customer would choose you5. This requirement is utterly independent of technological context. Whether a business operates in retail, software, healthcare, or education (sectors to which Porter has successfully applied his frameworks), the strategic imperative remains: articulate a unique, defensible reason for your existence and organize all activities around that clarity1,5.
Leading Theorists and the Strategic Lineage
Porter’s frameworks emerged from and contributed to a broader evolution in strategic thought. His work built upon earlier organizational theory while simultaneously reframing how practitioners understood competition1,3.
His insistence on the primacy of industry structure and competitive positioning (rather than internal resources alone) shaped subsequent schools of strategic thought. Later scholars would develop the resource-based view of strategy, emphasizing unique capabilities, which Porter’s concept of competitive advantage already implicitly contained5.
The intellectual rigor of Porter’s approach—grounding strategy in economic logic rather than management fashion—has made his frameworks remarkably resistant to obsolescence1. When business theory cycled through emphases on quality management, reengineering, benchmarking, and digital transformation, Porter’s fundamental frameworks remained relevant because they address the eternal question: In the face of competition, how does a company create value that customers will pay for?3,4,5
Why This Quote Matters Today
Porter’s assertion that underlying principles endure addresses a specific anxiety of contemporary leadership: the fear that digital disruption, AI, and accelerating change have invalidated established wisdom. His quote offers intellectual reassurance grounded in rigorous analysis—the reassurance that while execution methods must evolve, the strategic logic remains constant3,5.
A company in 2026 deploying AI must still answer the questions Porter posed in 1980: What is our distinctive competitive position? Are we competing primarily on cost or differentiation? Have we organized our entire value chain to reinforce that choice? Are we creating barriers that prevent rivals from copying our approach?1,5 The technology changes; the strategic imperative does not.
This constancy of principle amidst technological change represents Porter’s most enduring intellectual contribution—not because his frameworks are perfect (they have rightful critics), but because they are grounded in the persistent economic realities that define business competition1,3.
References
1. https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/marketing/porters-generic-strategies
2. https://miro.com/strategic-planning/what-are-porters-four-strategies/
3. https://www.isc.hbs.edu/strategy/Pages/strategy-explained.aspx
4. https://cs.furman.edu/~pbatchelor/mis/Slides/Porter%20Strategy%20Article.pdf
5. https://www.sachinrekhi.com/michael-porter-on-developing-a-compelling-strategy
6. https://hbr.org/1996/11/what-is-strategy
7. https://hbsp.harvard.edu/product/10303-HBK-ENG
8. https://www.hbs.edu/ris/download.aspx?name=20170524+Strategy+Keynote_+v4_full_final.pdf

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