Last Updated on June 4, 2026 by Dave Schoenbeck
If you asked each of your employees right now, would they be able to name your company’s top three priorities without looking anything up? In many organizations, the answer is no. Despite having hardworking teams and even turning a profit, I see some of my new clients operating under an extreme lack of business alignment.
The gap between what leaders think the team knows and what the team actually knows is where business alignment breaks down. Fortunately, if you take immediate action, you can start to see a big difference in your company cohesion right away.
Key Takeaways:
What Exactly is Business Alignment and Why Does It Matter?
Defining Business Alignment
Business alignment is the flow state in which all members of your organization are working toward the same objectives. Each employee’s work should advance the company’s overall mission strategically. When priorities are shared on every level of the business, resources can be stewarded productively to make sustained progress.
The Tangible Benefits of Alignment in Business
Strong strategic business alignment produces results you can see and measure. Efficiency goes up because people stop reinventing the wheel and wasting time on unimportant tasks. Decision-making improves because everyone is operating from the same set of priorities.
Employee engagement increases when people feel that their work matters and connects to something larger than themselves. Engaged employees mean lower turnover, better employee satisfaction survey results, more people willing to take on additional tasks, and higher turnout for company functions. In other words, a company that’s aligned is a company that’s alive.
The Dangers of a Misaligned Business
Lack of Clarity on Goals and Strategy
One of the most corrosive forces in any business is a lack of clarity, especially at the top. When your team doesn’t have a clear picture of where the company is headed, goal-setting becomes a free-for-all. Each department fills the communication void with its own interpretation of what you really want.
Inconsistent Communication and Decision-Making
As a business coach, when I first meet a new CEO client, I watch for telltale signs of misalignment in the business. These often include the team’s slow adoption of change, frequent errors and misinterpretations, and confusion about the business’s direction.
Long-Term Derailment
Beyond the obvious signs of conflict, there are also less apparent, long-term consequences of business misalignment that often only become clear after months or even years. Competing goals, conflicting incentives, and an “us vs. them” mentality are all easy to slip into when departments are not working in tandem.
For example, in many cases, different departments are vying for budget resources and access to leadership. There is a natural competition and grinding between competing groups that leads to ideological differences and eventually communication breakdowns. It doesn’t have to be this way.
Building the Foundation: Setting Clear, Aligned Business Goals
The Role of Vision and Mission
Every effort to align with business strategy starts at the same first step: drafting a clear, compelling vision and mission statement. A CEO may have a direction in mind for the company, but how well has that been communicated to everyone else?
The vision is where you’re headed, while the mission is why it matters. Together, they give your employees the context they need to make smart decisions about their individual tasks. When your team genuinely understands and believes in where you’re going as a company, business alignment becomes a shared commitment.
Cascading Goals Effectively
Next, you’ll need a system for translating your high-level priorities into action. To start, adopt a goal-setting framework such as OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) or SMART goals to ensure your objectives are achievable, specific, and deadline-driven.
The key is to then cascade those goals down to every level of the organization. A team leader’s quarterly goals should explicitly connect to the company’s annual objectives, and every direct report should also understand how their individual work fits into the big picture.
Ensuring Buy-In and Understanding
Although there are steps you can take to make business alignment easier, you cannot simply impose a new structure without involving your employees. They are an integral part of bringing your vision to life, so it’s important to get their buy-in on the company’s direction, within reason.
I learned a lifelong lesson during my days as the head of operations for Babies R Us. During store visits, I would always give the management team a 5-minute overview of how they could contribute to achieving our company’s goals. At the conclusion of my “brilliant” pitch, I would always ask them to tell me what they understood to be the key ideas. To my surprise, they could rarely describe the key points. Perhaps I wasn’t the best communicator, but these talented people had their own filters rather than mine. The lesson is: always ask for clarification about what they heard. Then you have found the way to achieve understanding, and then their focus and help.
You don’t have to let your employees call the shots, but bringing your team into the goal-setting process gives them a sense of ownership that translates into increased productivity. Be willing to hear their ideas and implement what makes sense.
Streamlining Workflows and Eliminating Bottlenecks
Clear goals don’t work if your process can’t support them. One of the most important aspects of business alignment is workflow optimization. The entire system will collapse if there are communication breakdowns, delays in the approval process, or questions about who does what. Identifying and correcting bottlenecks is what will allow your business alignment to succeed.
Fostering Cross-Functional Collaboration
Alignment in business lives or dies through collaboration. When departments are siloed, even when each team is performing well individually, the organization suffers. Regular cross-functional check-ins, shared project management tools, a documented reporting structure, and a clearly defined decision-making process all help departments to work together.
Empowering Employees and Promoting Accountability
An aligned business is one where accountability is willingly embraced by each employee. This happens when each team member feels a real sense of ownership over their role and has a clear understanding of how their work advances the business’s mission. When people feel like a trusted part of a whole, they hold themselves to a higher standard.
Adapting to Market Changes and New Challenges
Staying aligned means staying flexible. Over time, markets shift, customer needs change, and unexpected challenges appear. The strongest businesses know how to adapt without losing their footing. They revisit their goals regularly, adjust their priorities as conditions shift, and communicate those changes clearly and quickly so the whole team can pivot.
Celebrating Successes and Learning from Setbacks
When teams hit their milestones but hear nothing back from leadership, they lose momentum. It’s important to celebrate the wins so that constructive criticism isn’t the only feedback they ever see. Treat setbacks as data points and see what you can learn from them, but don’t forget to call out the wins as well.
My Top Tip for Alignment in Business
To improve business alignment for my clients, I use Trello boards that clearly identify their top three goals for the quarter. Below each goal description, we break down the steps to achieve it and move the most critical tasks to a column called Tasks for This Week. The completed tasks are moved to a separate column so we can easily reference our achievements later.
The Trello boards can be viewed by all management, so there’s never any question about progress or direction. The goals, tasks, and deadlines are clear to everyone involved.
Business Alignment Starts Now
If your team isn’t moving in the same direction, you don’t have to figure it out alone. Small business coaching is one of the most effective ways to uncover the clarity, accountability, and momentum your company needs to align and stay aligned.
Need Help?
Do you want more tips on making business alignment work for your organization? Click here to schedule a free video call, and let’s talk. For more information on leadership, goal-setting, and more, click here to sign up for my weekly articles on the keys to entrepreneurial success
Coach Dave



