A thought has been bothering me recently. Not because it is new. Because it keeps returning.
I have spent much of my career moving toward advisory, assessment and strategic work. Over time, this has changed how I spend my days. Less execution. More analysis. Less operational responsibility. More conversations about capability, governance, direction and change.
On most days, I consider this a natural consequence of experience. On some days, however, another question appears. Have I drifted too far away from the work?
The Distance Created by Experience
Experience creates perspective. That is one of its greatest benefits. Patterns become visible. Connections emerge. Problems that once seemed isolated begin to reveal common causes. This ability to zoom out is valuable. It allows us to see things that are difficult to observe from within the daily flow of work.
But every advantage has a trade-off. The further we zoom out, the further we move away from the details. And sometimes those details matter.
The Expert’s Dilemma
This creates an interesting tension. To become an expert, we often need to move beyond execution. To remain relevant, we need to stay connected to it.
Too much focus on day-to-day activities can make it difficult to see the bigger picture. Too much distance can make the bigger picture detached from reality. Neither extreme is ideal. The challenge is finding the right balance.
A Question of Comfort
When I examine this more closely, I am not actually worried that I have forgotten how things work. What I notice instead is that I have not spent enough time in operational roles recently to feel entirely comfortable there. That is a different concern.
Not capability. Familiarity.
Not knowledge. Proximity.
The distinction matters. Because the solution is not necessarily to abandon strategic work.
The solution may simply be to remain connected to execution often enough that reality continues to challenge assumptions.
Staying Close Enough
Perhaps expertise requires a certain distance. But perhaps it also requires a periodic return. A chance to experience the constraints, frustrations and trade-offs that practitioners face every day.
Not because we need to perform those roles permanently. Because those experiences keep our thinking grounded. They provide friction. And friction is often where learning happens.
An Open Question
I am still thinking about this. How close to the work should an expert remain? How much distance is useful? How much distance is dangerous?
I do not have an answer. What I do know is that expertise seems to involve a constant balancing act. We need enough distance to see patterns. And enough proximity to ensure those patterns still reflect reality.
Perhaps the goal is not to choose between strategic thinking and operational experience. Perhaps the goal is to keep one foot in each world.