Claim
The company story is the company strategy (Horowitz), and the operational consequence is a monthly narrative-drift audit that compares sales decks, the homepage, and product release notes against the canonical story, resolving contradictions before they reach a buyer.
Mechanism
Strategy and narrative are the same artifact: the story names the world-shift, the company's role in it, and the change buyers should make. When the artifacts that face buyers (decks, homepage, release notes) drift from each other, downstream content rebuilds on inconsistent ground — every campaign, page rewrite, or AEO investment compounds the drift. A monthly audit catches three-way inconsistencies (sales is selling X, the homepage promises Y, release notes ship Z). A single human owner — typically the founder, CMO, or PMM lead — resolves contradictions before they propagate.
Conditions
Holds when:
- The org has a canonical story (or is willing to write one).
- The audit owner has the authority to make sales/marketing/product align (or the political weight to escalate).
- The cadence is sustainable — monthly is a default, quarterly works for slower-shipping orgs.
Fails when:
- There is no canonical story and the audit becomes a writing exercise rather than a check.
- The audit owner has no authority and the contradictions outlast the audit cycle.
- The company is mid-pivot and the canonical story is supposed to drift.
Evidence
"The company story is the company strategy."
Cited proof points: Amplitude, Clearbit, Auvik. Operating move: a monthly narrative-drift audit comparing sales decks, homepage, and product release notes against the canonical story.
— Andy Raskin, https://andyraskin.com/, April 2026 update
Signals
- A named story document exists and has visible "last reviewed" timestamps.
- Sales decks, homepage hero, and release notes share the same world-shift framing.
- AEO/SEO content briefs cite the canonical story as their input, not a fresh framing per cycle.
Counter-evidence
For early-stage companies in fast pivots, premature canonization of a story can lock the team into a frame they should be exploring. The audit cadence works only when the story is stable enough to drift against.
Cross-references
- Sell the world-shift, not the product comparison — Raskin's canonical narrative architecture this audit protects.
- Sales pitches need a Setup before the Follow-Through; most pitches skip the Setup — Dunford's pitch structure that depends on a stable story.
- B2B homepages must communicate use case, alternative, and result in five seconds — Pierri's homepage frame; the audit checks whether it matches the deck.