The Deepdive

Strategy Cosplay: When Slide Decks Replace Real Leadership

Allen & Ida

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A flawless slide deck can feel like leadership, right up until you realize nothing actually changed. We start with the familiar corporate ritual, the glass room, the laser pointer, the proprietary framework names, then pull the thread on what’s really being purchased when companies hire strategy consultants: not insight, but authorization. The organizational psychology is brutal and oddly comforting at the same time. When leaders lack epistemic confidence and fear the consequences of being wrong, they “launder” a hunch through a prestigious third party and bring it back as data-certified truth.

Read the companion article on https://medium.com/@allanandida

From there we dig into the hidden economics of risk aversion. If an internal VP makes a high-stakes call and it fails, a career can be over. A consulting firm becomes an expensive shield, a way to shift reputational fallout while preserving internal status. That’s not just wasteful spending; it’s a signal that psychological safety is missing, and that the company has learned to rent courage instead of building it. We also unpack the long-term damage with our favorite metaphor: rely on a GPS long enough and you forget how to navigate, except this GPS bills $400 an hour.

We’re not anti-consultant. We lay out when external help is exactly what good judgment looks like, and how to tell a healthy engagement from strategy cosplay: tight scope, clear goals, a planned exit, and real knowledge transfer so you need them less after they leave. Then we hit the AI paradox: analysis is cheaper than ever, but consulting dependence keeps growing because AI can’t sit in the boardroom and take the blame. If you’ve ever wondered whether you’re buying expertise or buying a signature, this one will give you language and a practical test. Subscribe, share this with a teammate who lives in slide decks, and leave a review with the most honest consulting moment you’ve seen.

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Ida

So, um, picture the scene. You are sitting in a glass-walled conference room on like one of the upper floors of a massive corporate high-rise.

Allan

Oh, yeah. One of those buildings that definitely has a rooftop bar that absolutely no employee has ever actually visited.

Ida

Right, exactly, because everyone's just way too busy. And, you know, the room is named inevitably something like the catalyst or uh horizon space.

Allan

Naturally. And there is always this massive spread of artisanal catering sitting in the corner.

Ida

Which no one is eating.

Allan

Right, because nobody wants to disrupt the very serious vibe of the room by chewing on a mini quiche.

Ida

Yeah, nobody touches the quiche. So the projector is humming softly. And standing at the front of the room is a consultant. They are, you know, young enough to still find airport lounges genuinely exciting.

Allan

And they're definitely armed with a high-powered laser point.

Ida

Oh, absolutely. And on the screen is a slide deck so meticulously formatted, so visually dense, that the bullet points actually appear to be load-bearing.

Allan

Like you can almost feel the structural integrity of the typography, just um keeping the entire company afloat.

Ida

Exactly. And the recommendations are bold. The frameworks have these deeply proprietary sounding names like uh the Synergy Vortex or the Optimization Prism.

Allan

Which mean absolutely nothing, by the way.

Ida

Nothing at all. But somewhere in the back of the room, a C-suite executive is just nodding slowly. It's this very specific, deeply satisfied nod of someone who has just had their own half-formed intuition professionally laundered.

Allan

Laundering is the perfect word for it, honestly.

Ida

Right. Repackaged into a two by two matrix and sold back to them at an astronomical markup. I love that this exists, but also why?

Allan

Well, that question actually sits right at the center of the research we are digging into today to answer it. We're pulling from a stack of organizational psychology papers, some pretty scathing management critiques, and um a few incredibly candid corporate case studies.

Ida

It's a fascinating pile of research, honestly.

Allan

It really is. Because we are exploring a multi-billion dollar phenomenon known as strategy cosplay. It's essentially what happens when an organization completely outsources its brain power.

Ida

Yeah, fundamentally confusing the act of commissioning an expensively bound 90-page slide deck with actual, you know, leadership.

Allan

Which is a wild dynamic to unpack. And for you listening, whether you are a seasoned executive signing off on these massive invoices or maybe a new hire desperately trying to figure out what a parallel work stream actually means.

Ida

Good luck with that, by the way.

Allan

Right. Or even if you're just someone fascinated by human psychology in the corporate wild, understanding this is crucial. It really is kind of the cheat code for surviving modern organizational life.

Ida

And surviving it requires understanding the distinction between actual insight and the sheer illusion of it. Because when a company engages in this strategy cosplay, they aren't like bringing people in to find groundbreaking, disruptive new ideas.

Allan

No, not at all. They're paying a premium to basically externalize their own cognition.

Ida

Aaron Powell It's a laundering process, just like we mentioned. A CEO has a hunch, but rather than just, you know, acting on it, they put it through this incredibly expensive machine.

Allan

Aaron Powell Yeah, let's unpack that laundering process a bit. Yeah. Because the mechanics of that are fascinating. Are they literally just paying a prestigious firm a fortune to agree with them in a fancier font?

Ida

Aaron Powell In a staggering number of cases, yes. That is exactly what they are doing. The organizational psychology literature highlights that leaders often have a pre-existing thought. Like they know what they want to do, but they lack the epistemic confidence to simply implement it and own the outcome. So they bring in external validation to kind of bridge that gap.

Allan

Wait, hold on. Epistemic confidence, meaning they just don't trust their own brains to be right, or is it that they don't trust that the rest of the company will believe they are right?

Ida

Aaron Powell Honestly, it's both. It's a massive deficit of trust in their own knowledge and in their organizational authority. So they hire a respected third-party firm to conduct a 12-week study.

Allan

Aaron Powell, the classic 12-week study.

Ida

Right, where they interview all the internal stakeholders and then miraculously arrive at the exact conclusion the CEO had in the shower like three months ago. It transforms a hunch into a certified external recommendation.

The Deck Is Not The Journey

Allan

Aaron Powell That feels like a deep, deep form of magical thinking. It's like believing that buying a highly detailed, incredibly expensive map is the exact same thing as actually taking the journey.

Ida

Oh, that's a great way to put it.

Allan

Yeah. You hold the map in your hands so you feel like you've already arrived at the destination.

Ida

Aaron Powell Well, let's take that map analogy a step further. Because the magical thinking isn't just about the map. It's about treating the map as the final deliverable.

Allan

Right. Which it isn't.

Ida

Exactly. In actual functional strategy, which the case studies show is considerably less photogenic and much messier, leaders recognize that an expensively produced deck is merely a hypothesis.

Allan

Yeah, the deck is the hypothesis and the organization itself is the experiment. You still have to actually run the test.

Ida

But in strategy cosplay, commissioning that diagnostic roadmap is treated as identical to solving the underlying problem. The executive team gets the binder, they have a celebratory dinner, and they feel this massive sense of accomplishment.

Allan

Even though nothing has actually changed yet.

Ida

Right. It creates the emotional sensation of progress without requiring a single inch of actual forward movement. The real work doesn't even begin until the consultants get back on their flights, but the company acts like the project is already a complete success.

Allan

Okay, but if the ideas aren't even new and the deck itself isn't actually solving the problem, why are companies spending millions and millions of dollars on this?

Ida

That is the million-dollar, or I guess multi-million dollar question.

Allan

It has to be an underlying mechanism driving that spend. We really have to look at the actual transaction taking place in that horizon space room. What are they really buying?

Ida

If we peel back the layers on that transaction, we find a rather uncomfortable truth about the state of modern management. We're looking at a profound leadership vacuum. These executives aren't buying clarity, they are buying cover.

Allan

Cover, like um protection from fallout.

Ida

That's the core of it, yeah. The case studies reveal a deeply ingrained culture of risk aversion. Let's look at how this plays out mechanically. Imagine a company wants to launch a controversial new product line or maybe restructure a division. Okay, a high spakes move.

Allan

Exactly. If an internal VP makes that call and it fails, their careers is effectively over. The conclusion of the project might be known before the kickoff meeting even happens, but the multimillion dollar engagement is structured entirely to have a respected third party sign their name to the risk.

Ida

Seriously, of course they did.

Allan

So it's basically an insurance policy disguised as an analytics project.

Ida

A very, very expensive insurance policy. Some management critics call it a shield of citations, or my personal favorite, liability management with better typography.

Allan

I love that. Liability management with better typography.

Ida

It's so accurate. And the logic operating in the background here is remarkably cynical, but you can't deny it's effective for the individuals involved. If the newly implemented strategy works out beautifully, the internal executives step up to the podium and take all the credit.

Allan

Oh, of course. For having the visionary foresight to make such a bold call. Then the board meeting looks very different.

Ida

Entirely different. The executives simply pull up the slide deck, they point to the logo of the prestigious consulting firm in the top right corner and say, Well, we followed the data. The smartest analysts in the world told us this was the optimal path. You can't blame us.

Allan

Wow. And the consultants just absorbed the reputational damage, which they can afford to do because they have a hundred other clients.

Ida

Okay, but here's the thing. What does that actually say about the company's internal culture? If your leadership team is so terrified of making a wrong call that they have to rent external courage for three million dollars a pop.

Allan

That's not a great look. No.

Ida

It means they have fundamentally failed to build an environment where being wrong is survivable.

Allan

That is the critical failure point right there. A healthy decision-making culture requires psychological safety. When a misstep means you get publicly fired or sidelined, internal teams become structurally paralyzed.

Ida

Yeah, they just freeze up.

Allan

Exactly. They are terrified of the consequences of a bad quarter or organizational politics or missing an earnings target. So nobody makes a move without an external safety net to catch them.

How Outsourcing Rewires A Company

Ida

And what happens when a muscle stays paralyzed for too long? It atrophies. Which brings us to the long-term structural damage this does to a company. This isn't just a one-off waste of money on a redundant slide deck. It actually rewires the organization's brain.

Allan

There is a brilliant analogy in the research that I cannot stop thinking about regarding this.

Ida

Yeah, the GPS analogy. It perfectly captures the cognitive decline.

Allan

It really does. Why don't you walk us through that one?

Ida

Yeah, so chronic outsourcing of your corporate strategy is exactly like relying on a GPS so exclusively for so long that you completely forget how to navigate your own neighborhood. You literally lose your internal sense of direction.

Allan

Because you never have to practice finding your own way.

Ida

Exactly. Only in this case, the GPS costs$400 an hour and it keeps suggesting the exact same route every single time you turn it on.

Allan

And that loss of internal direction isn't some accidental side effect either. It's actually a structural byproduct of the consulting business model itself.

Ida

Oh, really? It's built into the model.

Allan

Yeah. The management critiques we read describe this industry as a self-licking ice cream cone. It is engineered, whether intentionally or just by the nature of the beast, to deepen the client's dependency over time.

Ida

Let's dig into the how of that. How does a company actually lose its ability to think? Walk me through what happens to, say, a smart junior executive in this kind of culture.

Allan

It's a subtle but really devastating process. So imagine a mid-level manager. They spend like four weeks doing deep, rigorous analysis on a market trend.

Ida

Putting in the late nights, doing the real work.

Allan

Exactly. They build a solid strategy, present it to their VP, and the VP says, great work, but we need prestigious firm X to validate this before we take it to the board.

Ida

Ouch.

Allan

Right. So the firm comes in, takes the manager's data, puts it into the proprietary template, and presents it. And the board applauds the firm.

Ida

Oh, that is soul crushing. So what does that manager do the next time a problem comes up?

Allan

Well, they don't bother doing the deep analysis. They realize that trying hard is actually riskier and less rewarding than just facilitating the hiring of the external firm.

Ida

They just become a middleman.

Allan

Exactly. Every quarter an organization externalizes its judgment, renting its strategic thinking instead of rewarding internal development. Those internal strategic muscles waste away. People learn that their job isn't to solve problems, their job is to manage the consultants who solve the problems.

Ida

So the internal teams are basically just reduced to tour guides for the external analysts.

Allan

Which leads to the terrifying math of this dependency. As those internal skills decline, the gap between what the company can think for itself and what the external consultants can produce actually widens.

Ida

This is simultaneously impressive and completely ridiculous because you're getting worse at thinking the consultants suddenly look even more like absolute geniuses by comparison.

Allan

That is exactly the dynamic. The internal team literally forgets how to build a basic financial model. So when the consultants deliver a complex one, it looks like magic.

Ida

Which makes the next consulting engagement feel absolutely vital.

Allan

Exactly. The company thinks, wow, we could never do this ourselves. The model generates its own demand by eroding the client's competence.

Ida

It's essentially a subscription model for organizational dependency. The company finds itself on its fourth consecutive transformation initiative. The external team has completely colonized the internal vocabulary with words like parallel work streams and synergistic alignment.

Allan

Oh, the jargon is everywhere.

Ida

And the company doesn't even know how to hold a meeting without them in the room.

Allan

Some of the case studies highlight these extreme scenarios where a specific external team has been onboarded so many times over so many years that they actually understand the company's historical org chart better than the internal HR department.

Ida

No way. Are you serious?

Allan

Yeah. You have situations where consultants are quietly explaining the company's own institutional history to new internal executive hires.

When Consultants Actually Help

Ida

Okay, I have to play devil's advocate here for a second because are we painting with too broad a brush? Like, are consultants always the villains in this story? Is all external help just this parasitic relationship designed to drain a company's intellect?

Allan

That's a really fair question. And no, it's a vital distinction. Consultants are not the villains here. In fact, the research is very clear that bringing in an external perspective is sometimes exactly what exceptional judgment looks like.

Ida

Okay, so there is a time and a place.

Allan

Absolutely. Yeah. The problem isn't the existence of consultants, it's the application of them.

Ida

So mechanically, what separates a healthy, high-functioning consulting engagement from the strategy cosplay we've been talking about?

Allan

It comes down to using them for specific novel expertise rather than using them as a substitute for internal courage.

Ida

That makes sense.

Allan

Yeah. Look at the valid use cases. Say a regional retailer is trying to enter the Asian market for the first time, or two massive pharmaceutical companies are navigating a complex merger, or a bank is tiptoeing through a new regulatory minefield, where a single compliance mistake equals a nine-figure settlement.

Ida

Right. Situations where you can honestly look around your own conference room and say, you know what, none of us have ever done this specific thing before, and we need someone who has the battle scars.

Allan

Precisely. Good consultants bring deep technical specialization. They also bring cross-industry pattern recognition. An internal team only sees how their company operates. A consultant has seen how 40 different companies in 10 different industries operate.

Ida

Which you just can't develop internally, no matter how smart your team is.

Allan

Right. And beyond expertise, they possess one other secret superpower that internal teams structurally cannot have.

Ida

Oh, what's their superpower?

Allan

They are structurally positioned to be unbiased truth-tellers.

Ida

Because they don't have to survive the corporate politics.

Allan

Exactly. An internal VP might see that a pet project of the CEO is totally failing, but they aren't going to say anything because, well, they want a promotion next year.

Ida

Yeah, you don't tell the emperor he has no clothes if the emperor signs your paycheck.

Allan

Right. But a consultant has absolutely no stake in the internal political dynamics. And more importantly, they will be on a flight home long before the long-term emotional consequences of a decision settle.

Ida

That's true.

Allan

They can look a CEO in the eye, deliver a highly uncomfortable truth like, hey, your flagship product is obsolete, and then just leave the room.

Ida

They can drop the truth bomb without worrying about the blast radius. That makes total sense. So if I'm an executive, how do I know if I'm in a healthy engagement or if I'm just renting a brain because I'm afraid to use my own?

Allan

The benchmark outlined in the organizational literature is pretty strict. A healthy engagement must be time-bounded, scope clear, and exit planned.

Ida

Meaning there is a hard stop, a clear end date, and a very specific, measurable goal.

Allan

Yes. A good engagement compresses years of organizational learning into months, but it ends with a genuine transfer of knowledge. The ultimate test of a consultant's value is what happens after they leave.

Ida

Like, did you actually learn anything?

Allan

Exactly. Has the internal team acquired new capabilities? Do they have a stronger, more independent way of approaching problems? A healthier relationship always ends with the client needing the consultant less.

Ida

Aaron Powell As opposed to immediately scheduling the kickoff meeting for engagement number four before the ink is even dry on engagement number three.

Allan

Exactly the opposite of that.

Ida

Wait, it gets better. I have to challenge this whole premise based on where we are right now technologically.

Allan

Oh. Let's hear it.

Ida

Because we are living in an era where analytical capability is being rapidly democratized. I mean, I can open my laptop right now, feed a year's worth of financial data into an AI tool, and ask it to generate a comprehensive gap analysis.

Allan

Aaron Powell War competitive two by two matrix. Trevor Burrus, Jr. Yeah.

Ida

In about 45 seconds. This is stuff that used to require a room full of junior analysts with incredibly expensive Ivy League degrees working for like three weeks straight.

Allan

It's true. The barrier to entry for complex analysis has plummeted.

Ida

So if the tools to do the thinking and the formatting are practically free and instantly accessible, shouldn't we be seeing a massive decline in this reliance on external consulting?

Allan

That is the exact paradox highlighted in the recent management critiques. Logically, the dependency should be shrinking. But the reality on the ground is the exact opposite. Yeah. Instead of engagements declining, they're actually expanding. Retainers are becoming more normalized, and external teams are embedding themselves even deeper into the daily operations of these companies.

Ida

How does that even make sense? If I can get the matrix for free, why am I paying three million dollars for it?

Allan

Because we have to go back to the mechanism we discussed earlier. The core issue was never a lack of analytical tools or raw data. The core issue is the leadership vacuum.

Ida

Ah, I see where this is going.

Allan

Right. What technology democratizes in analytical capacity, organizations simply find new and creative ways to outsource.

Ida

Because the AI can't take the blame.

Allan

Exactly. An AI can give you a brilliant strategic roadmap in four seconds, but an AI cannot sit in a board meeting and absorb the reputational damage if the roadmap fails.

Ida

You can't fire Chat GPT.

Allan

No, you can't. Executives don't just want the raw data, they want the safety net. They want the prestigious brand name attached to the recommendation.

Ida

So even if the consultant is just using the exact same AI tool to generate the matrix, the executive still wants to buy it from them to secure that external authorization.

Allan

Exactly. They're buying the signature, not the spreadsheet.

Ida

I'll let zoom out for a second because the sheer scale of this dynamic is mind-boggling. The global management consulting industry pulls in tens of billions of dollars annually. We are rapidly approaching a future where the corporate organizational chart practically has a major consulting firm permanently sitting in a box right next to the CEO. What does this say about us as a society?

Allan

It says something deeply uncomfortable, I think, about how we value the appearance of work over the substance of it.

Ida

Yeah, that's credibly true.

Allan

It tells us that we have collectively made peace with substituting actual rigorous thought for beautifully designed artifacts. We have basically accepted that the mass production of strategic documents is functionally the same as strategic leadership.

Ida

Provided the framework names sound proprietary enough and the formatting is flawless, of course.

Allan

Exactly. As long as it looks the part.

Ida

We've built these massive, complex organizations that are exceptionally good at commissioning thought, but they are completely out of practice at actually having a thought.

Allan

That is the tragic irony of strategy cosplay. So for you listening, if you find yourself navigating this dynamic in your own career, maybe you're sitting in one of those glass-walled rooms right now. Right. The researchers offer one very powerful free piece of diagnostic advice before your company signs off on the next massive external project.

Ida

I'm ready. What's the test?

Allan

You need to ask this question genuinely and force an honest answer from your team. What specific novel expertise does this external team have that we cannot develop or access internally within a reasonable timeframe?

Ida

And if the answer is deep technical knowledge or regulatory precedent or navigating a foreign market we've never seen, then great, sign the check.

Allan

Absolutely. But if you push past the corporate jargon, past the talk of synergies and optimization, and the honest answer is just, well, we need validation, or the board will only believe it if someone else says it, then you don't actually need a consultant. No, you don't.

Ida

You need to look in the mirror. It all comes back to that conference room. The artisanal snacks nobody is eating, the hum of the projector, and those load-bearing bullet points shining on the screen. Because here is the lingering thought I want you to take away from all of this deep dive. If an organization cannot form a strategic view without paying a third party millions of dollars to authorize it, the consultants aren't the problem. Not at all. The consultants are simply how your leadership vacuum invoices itself.