You set a heading, then the current of whatever's loudest nudges you a few degrees off it every week — and nobody's hand stays on the tiller. ShinobiOps gives you a strategy officer who holds a rolling 90-day plan and keeps the whole business pointed at it, so the destination stops drifting away the moment things get busy.
No one decides to abandon the plan. You just answer the loud thing in front of you, every day, and the current carries you a few degrees off course — invisible in a week, a different company in a year. A business without a hand on the tiller doesn't stop moving; it moves wherever the noise pushes it, and the growth a held direction would have produced quietly evaporates.
It surfaces as a moment. At the Q4 review the quarter closed fine — but asked where the business will be in eighteen months, you go quiet. Not because you're failing, but because you've been winning weeks while losing the year, steering toward nothing in particular.
Businesses run against a written plan grow about 30% faster.
Same effort, same hours — the difference is whether they're aimed. Drift doesn't just cost direction; it costs the growth direction would have produced.
You can't drift somewhere on purpose.
Seth is your strategy officer. He keeps a rolling 90-day plan, ranks what actually moves the business against it, and flags the moment the week's work has drifted off the heading. You set the destination; he makes sure the business keeps steering toward it instead of toward the loudest noise.
You set the heading. He keeps everyone holding it.
A held direction only matters if the rest of the business runs — so Seth works strategy alongside five officers briefed on your business: Oprah on operations and recurring admin, Bill on cash and margin, Brenda on brand and campaigns, Hunter on pipeline and the accounts going quiet, Scout reading your market for what just changed. A full executive team in your corner, for less than one afternoon with a consultant.
Setup takes minutes. Seth turns your goals into a live 90-day plan and keeps it in front of you every week — so the heading stops being a January memory.
Get a plan that sticks →