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audit-strategy-consistency
// Audit a competitive strategy for internal consistency using Porter's tests. Use when evaluating whether a strategy hangs together, after formulating strategy, or when diagnosing strategic drift.
// Audit a competitive strategy for internal consistency using Porter's tests. Use when evaluating whether a strategy hangs together, after formulating strategy, or when diagnosing strategic drift.
| name | audit-strategy-consistency |
| description | Audit a competitive strategy for internal consistency using Porter's tests. Use when evaluating whether a strategy hangs together, after formulating strategy, or when diagnosing strategic drift. |
Run Porter's Figure 1-3 consistency tests against a firm's competitive strategy to determine whether goals and policies form a coherent, implementable whole.
The firm's current competitive strategy: explicit goals (financial, market position, social) and key operating policies across each functional area. Typically produced by upstream skills (e.g., formulate-strategy). If not available, extract from the user's description.
## Strategy Consistency Audit: [Firm/Business Unit]
### Strategy Summary
- Goals: [list]
- Key Operating Policies: [list by functional area]
### Test Results
#### A. Internal Consistency
| # | Test | Verdict | Evidence |
|---|------|---------|----------|
| 1 | Goals mutually achievable? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 2 | Policies address goals? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 3 | Policies reinforce each other? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
#### B. Environmental Fit
| # | Test | Verdict | Evidence |
|---|------|---------|----------|
| 4 | Exploit opportunities? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 5 | Deal with threats? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 6 | Timing vs. environment? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 7 | Responsive to societal concerns? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
#### C. Resource Fit
| # | Test | Verdict | Evidence |
|---|------|---------|----------|
| 8 | Match available resources? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 9 | Timing vs. change capacity? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
#### D. Communication & Implementation
| # | Test | Verdict | Evidence |
|---|------|---------|----------|
| 10 | Goals understood? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 11 | Congruent with values? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
| 12 | Sufficient capability? | PASS/FAIL | [reasoning] |
### Overall Verdict: [CONSISTENT / PARTIALLY CONSISTENT / INCONSISTENT]
### Priority Inconsistencies
1. [Most critical gap + which test failed]
2. [Next most critical]
Firm: Regional grocery chain pursuing both cost leadership (goal: lowest prices in market) and premium organic selection (goal: widest organic assortment).
Test 1 -- Goals mutually achievable? FAIL. Lowest-price positioning requires cost minimization across procurement and operations. Widest organic assortment requires premium supplier relationships and higher SKU complexity, which drives costs up. The goals work against each other.
Test 3 -- Policies reinforce each other? FAIL. Procurement policy targets lowest-cost suppliers, but merchandising policy mandates premium organic brands. These policies create internal conflict in buyer decision-making.
Test 5 -- Deal with threats? FAIL. Competitors (Whole Foods, Aldi) each own one positioning clearly. Straddling invites competitive response from both directions with no defensible position.
Test 8 -- Match available resources? FAIL. The firm lacks the scale for cost leadership (regional vs. national chains) and the brand equity for premium organic positioning simultaneously.
Overall Verdict: INCONSISTENT. The strategy attempts to straddle two generic strategies. Resolution requires choosing one position or defining a focused segment where both goals are achievable (e.g., "affordable organic for families" in a specific metro area).
Analyze industry structure using Porter's Five Forces. Use when asked to assess industry attractiveness, competitive dynamics, profit potential, or structural threats.
Evaluate market entry opportunities using Porter's entry analysis framework. Use when asked to assess whether to enter a new market, how to enter, or what entry barriers exist.
Design offensive or defensive competitive moves using Porter's framework. Use when planning competitive actions, responding to competitor moves, or managing industry discipline.
Classify an industry's evolutionary stage and structural type using Porter's criteria. Use when asked to diagnose industry maturity, identify if an industry is emerging/fragmented/declining, or understand industry evolution.
Map strategic groups within an industry using Porter's framework. Use when asked to segment competitors, identify positioning opportunities, or analyze mobility barriers.
Route competitive strategy analysis to the right Porter skill. Use when asked for broad competitive analysis, industry assessment, strategy formulation, or any Porter-related question.