There’s a moment most SaaS founders can point to, even if they didn’t recognise it at the time. The product had found its market. The team had doubled in twelve months. The metrics were moving in the right direction.
And yet something had changed — a subtle loss of coherence that was hard to name but impossible to ignore. Decisions were taking longer. Priorities were being relitigated in meetings that used to take five minutes. Teams were shipping things that didn’t quite connect to the goals the leadership team thought everyone had agreed on.
This is the strategy gap. And it’s not a strategy problem.
What the Strategy Gap Actually Is
Most fast-growing SaaS companies don’t have a bad strategy. They have a strategy that stopped travelling.
In the early days, strategic alignment is a byproduct of proximity. The founder is in every room. Context is transmitted in real time. The five-person team doesn’t need a goal-setting framework because the goal-setting framework is the founder, available to every person on the team, constantly.
At 40 people, that system breaks. The founder can’t be in every room. New hires join who weren’t there for the early decisions. Departments form with their own internal logic and their own definitions of what a good week looks like.
The strategy is still clear at the top. By the time it reaches the people executing it, it has degraded — through layers of interpretation, competing priorities, and the simple reality that everyone is too busy to check whether their work is still pointed at the right outcome.
The strategy gap isn’t a failure of leadership or culture. It’s a structural consequence of growth. And it compounds quietly, one quarter at a time, until it shows up in the numbers.
Why Most Startups Don’t Fix It Until It’s Expensive
The strategy gap is invisible until it isn’t. Because everyone is working hard — shipping features, closing deals, onboarding customers — the misalignment doesn’t feel like a problem until the quarter ends and the outcomes don’t reflect the effort.
By then, the cost has already been paid. A quarter of engineering resource allocated to features that didn’t move the growth metric. A sales team optimising for logo count while the business needed net revenue retention. A marketing function generating pipeline that didn’t fit the ICP the product team was building for.
Each function was performing. The system wasn’t. And the longer the gap stays open, the more expensive it becomes to close — because every new hire, every new team, and every new quarter builds on the misaligned foundation beneath it.
The Tools That Close It
The good news is that the strategy gap is a solved problem — not through better planning or stronger culture, but through the right operational infrastructure. A small category of tools has emerged specifically to close the distance between where strategy lives and where execution happens.
OKR software is the most direct solution. At its core, it does one thing: makes the connection between individual work and company objectives visible, trackable, and maintainable without manual effort.
When that connection is explicit — when an engineer can see that the feature they’re building this sprint directly contributes to a key result the business cares about this quarter — the strategic coherence that used to travel by proximity travels structurally instead.
Three tools are worth knowing for SaaS teams at the growth stage.
- OKRs Tool is built for the 50-to-200-person window, with a flat-rate pricing model and a weekly check-in cadence that keeps teams engaged without adding overhead.
- Perdoo combines OKR and KPI tracking in a single view — useful for teams that need to connect strategic objectives to ongoing performance metrics without a separate system.
- Weekdone is built around the weekly update, making it the strongest option for teams whose primary failure mode is cadence rather than goal quality.
None of these tools solves the strategy gap on their own. The gap is closed by the combination of a clear goal-setting process and an infrastructure that makes that process sustainable week after week, without relying on willpower or a founder’s presence to hold it together.
What Closing the Gap Looks Like in Practice
The SaaS companies that close the strategy gap early share a recognisable pattern. Objectives are set at the company level before the quarter opens — three or four directional bets that define what the business needs to accomplish.
Teams develop their own objectives in the context of those company goals, with input from the people doing the work rather than handed down from a planning offsite. Progress is reviewed weekly in a fifteen-minute check-in that surfaces blockers before they become misses.
The result isn’t a perfect alignment system. It’s a team that catches drift early — in week four rather than week twelve — and has the infrastructure to correct it before the quarter is already decided.
For a SaaS founder navigating the messy middle ground between early-stage scrappiness and enterprise-grade process, that early correction is worth more than any amount of strategic planning. The strategy was never the problem. Keeping it alive from one week to the next is where the work actually is.





