Over the past six years, we have run approximately 500 Strategy Sims sessions with participants from around the world. From C-level executives in global organizations to executive education programs at top business schools, developing venture ecosystems in the Middle East, and backing startup founders with global ambitions, Strategy Sims have served as a powerful tool for learning, insight, and professional development.

But how does it work? What is the workflow that makes Strategy Sims work? And what can new leaders and faculty learn in applying the Strategy Sims method in action?

By: Chris Rangen

The Scale Up Angel Sim, a deeply immersive, engaging and competitive way to learn angel investing, @Tiye Angel Network, Cairo, Egypt, Oct 2023

What is Strategy Sims?

The Strategy Sims are designed to help organizations and individuals navigate complex strategic challenges, develop critical thinking, and simulate high-stakes decision-making. Strategy Sims are designed to build learning, mastery and company growth, using experiential learning. The structure is based on modern theories on adult learning, including the renowned Lego Serious Play method by Johan Roos and Bart Victor .

Rather than passively listening to lengthy lectures, we use a combination of pre-work, micro-lectures, team-based competitive experiential learning, in sum driving far deeper and effective learning and development. Feedback from participants emphasize three key points;

  • Engaging: people love the format of an experiential learning program (with a strong competitive streak)
  • Fast-paced learning: learning comes from every angle, with high-pace, micro-burst, and instant shift from ‘learning to doing’
  • Team: teamwork, and great teamwork is the key to a successful Strategy Sim session. Without it, any team will struggle. Hands-on leadership (people have formal leadership roles in the program) and strong team collaboration makes all the difference – just like in real life

“Intense”, “Exhilarating”, “Super insightful!”, “Weirdly realistic”, “Eye-opening”, “Hard, worth it”, “loved the experience – thank you!”, “Thank you for the craziest 3 days!”, said the 25+ participants we recently had at Fund Manager! Program for the Newton Venture Program.

Meet the nine Strategy Sims

The nine Strategy Sims cover a wide range of topics, industries, content and market conditions, allowing participants to experience real-world content at an accelerated pace. Most of the Strategy Sims are built around the concept of a team-based journey, taking a company from zero to exit (Scale Up!), or turning a company around from laggard to breakout leader (Transform!)

The nine Strategy Sims are:

Transform!: from laggard to breakout winner

For corporate users, leadership development, strategy, innovation, change management and executive education programs.

Scale Up! From idea to exit

For entrepreneurs, startups, scale ups, accelerators, incubators, VC Funds, and startup ecosystem development and entrepreneurship education.

Scale Up MENA! From idea to exit in the Middle East (launching 2025!)

For entrepreneurs, startups, scale ups, accelerators, incubators, VC funds and startup ecosystem development in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as entrepreneurship education.

Scale Up Angel! From Novice Investor to Super Angel

For angel investor networks, angel clubs, ecosystem development and education programs.

Scale Up X! Gender-based entrepreneurship

For female founders, female startup programs, gender-based entrepreneurship development

Supercluster!: Accelerating national transformation

For national transformation programs, innovation clusters, economic development, ecosystems and education programs.

Fund Manager!: From Thesis to DPI

For GP accelerators, venture capital training & education, fund manager development, VC funds, fund-of-funds, VC ecosystem development, LP training and education programs

Corporate Venture!: from innovation to value

For corporate venture teams, corporate strategy teams and education programs

VC Ecosystem: from emerging to outperforming (coming in 2026)

For VC ecosystem developers, international finance- and development organizations, government agencies, VC associations, national innovation agencies,  VC education programs

Scale Up! in action in the Middle East, @Tamkeen and Falak Innovation, Bahrain, April 2024

The Strategy Sims method

1. Client (Participants) Context

Understanding the participants’ context is crucial to delivering a relevant and engaging Strategy Sim. We begin by assessing what is top of mind for participants, the challenges they are facing, and the external factors influencing their industry.

For example, if a session is focused on strategic dynamics, we might ask: What are the implications of the current NATO rift and Europe’s sudden need to rearm? Should traditional European industrial companies expand into security and defense?

With defense spending on the rise, what should legacy companies do? Expanding Transform! to cover new strategy questions rapidly arising for (mostly) European firms in spring 2025.

If we are planning a Scale Up Masterclass, we might look at the current market for pre-seed, seed and venture-stage fundraising, we look at the latest deals and valuations and news in the market.

Meet over 500 real life investors, with terms sheet, SAFE notes and convertible structures from across the MENA region

By aligning the simulation with real-world contexts, we ensure that the experience is highly relevant and actionable.

2. Learning Goals

Each Strategy Sim is designed with specific learning goals in mind. These objectives vary based on the audience, program,  industry, and challenges they wish to address. Common learning goals include:

  • Understanding competitive strategy, leadership and transformation
  • Enhancing decision-making under uncertainty
  • Leadership during change and change management
  • Exploring business model innovation
  • Developing financial literacy and capital strategy
  • How to build a venture capital fund
  • How to raise startup financing?
  • How to improve national competitiveness
  • Mastering business angel investing
Transform! Puts participants into the shoes of a top management team, brought in to turn around a legacy company with declining sales, underperforming market cap and a culture strongly against change. Can the new management team successfully lead the  transformation, using the 10 Principles of Transformation?
The learning engine in Scale Up MENA!, our latest Strategy Sim, built entirely on MENA startup content. Startup teams need to master every key topic from equity setup, multi-stage financing, product development, market expansion, revenue growth (ARR) and exit negotiations, taking the company from early idea to a successful exit in just a few days.  March 2025
Detailed program for a 3-day Scale Up! Masterclass, for founders, accelerators and ecosystem builders, Sep 2024

3. Participant Outcomes

The success of a Strategy Sim is measured by the impact on participants. Key outcomes often include:

  • Improved strategic thinking and strategic leadership
  • Increased confidence in personal leadership during change management
  • Enhanced collaboration and robust teamwork
  • Greater confidence in making complex strategy decisions
  • Better equipped to raise one or multiple future fundraising rounds for founders
  • More confidence in building a venture capital firm
Upon completion of the Fund Manager Masterclass participants should be able to successfully understand and navigate the 10-15 year fund journey, January 2025

4. Selection of Strategy Sim

Choosing the right Strategy Sim depends on the participants,  learning goals and the client context. With nine unique simulations to date, it is easy for clients and executive educators to find and select just the right Strategy Sim.

Scale Up! Content deepdive, with an expanded focus on climate and cleantech. march 2022
Corporate Venture, a niche Strategy Sim, takes participants through the challenges of building a world-class corporate venture program. December 2024

5. Case Study

Each Strategy Sim is enriched with real-world case studies that provide practical insights into business strategies, industry shifts, and key decision points. These cases serve as a foundation for thinking, allowing participants to draw parallels between the simulation and real-life business challenges before stepping into Strategy Sim experience.

Fund Manager Case study, @Accenture, Frankfurt, March 2025
Want to dig deeper?

Read the full case study for Transform!, using the Mobility industry, at Duke University, April 2025.

6. Pre-Pack

Prior to the session, participants receive a pre-pack containing background materials, industry insights, and key frameworks to help them prepare. This ensures they enter the simulation with a solid understanding of the context and objectives. Some programs also run a 45. Minute webinar

For Transform, spring 2025, participants enjoy multiple classroom lectures, then receive:

Pre-session video, with an intro to corporate strategy & finance

  • Case study
  • Welcome brief from the Board chair
  • Team role descriptions
  • Management onboarding pack
  • Building the Transformational Company report
Management onboarding pack, BD team presenting how to create value by investing into Explore business models and doing CVC bolt-ons. Something for every new management team to reflect on, March 2025

For Fund Manager, spring 2025, participants receive:

  • Case study
  • Team role descriptions
  • Pre-session workbook, with core content intro and basic equity math for VC fund managers

Slidepack

  • Selected reading on ‘inside a VC fund’, and ‘how to set up a VC fund’
Pre-session workbook for Fund Manager, January 2024.
Want to dig deeper?

Read the BoD Chair Welcome Memo, Team roles and Management onboarding pack for Transform!, using the Mobility industry, at Duke University, April 2025.

7. Run the Strategy Sim

The core of the experience, the Strategy Sim itself, is an immersive, high-energy session where participants engage in competitive team work and dynamic decision-making. Depending on the chosen simulation, participants will:

  • Select team roles (you own your role during the program)
  • Formulate strategies (ambition, how to get there, how to win)
  • Compete against other teams (Collaborative, competitive, backstabbing?)
  • Respond to market shifts and external pressures (process information in real-time)
  • Manage resources and capital allocation (investments, divestment)
  • Negotiate deals and partnerships (alliances, take overs, hostile acquisitions?)
  • Build financial models, budgets and multiple presentations (average 4 presentations per program, up to 12 presentations in multi-day, complex programs)
  • Craft a plan to win (out compete the rest)
Classroom pitches at the Venture Asset Management Program, using Fund Manager, @IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland, September 2024.
Angels and founders collaborating on analyzing later stage investors, mapping them in the Investor Map, @Tiye Angels, Cairo, Egypt,  October 2023
Teamwork is key, four DNB Bankers going through the founder’s journey, here analyzing a term sheet from a Superinvestor, using Scale Up! @DNB, Oslo, Norway, October 2024.
Last minute merger negotiation between two teams, Transform @IE, Madrid. Inorganic growth through mergers, acquisitions and hostile take-overs are key to leapfrogging the competition. Leadership and dealmaking skills is vital here, May 2023

8. Select & celebrate the winner

Ultimately, every Strategy Sim session will end with a winner. In Scale Up! this is often the company that can achieve the best revenue, growth and exit transaction. In Transform! it is the first team to hit 50BN – or 100BN – market cap in public markets.

At IMD, for the Venture Asset Management Program, the winning fund, Circular Dragons achieved a 253X net DPI, but got stuck due to some highly questionable financial transactions, leaving room for BASA, fund III to secure the top spot, with a  188X net DPI, both massive outlier performances.

The fund Manager Masterclass – with 17 funds across 8 firms Fund Manager @IMD, September 2024

9. Debrief & Knowledge Transfer

Following the simulation, we conduct a structured debrief to help participants reflect on their decisions, analyse outcomes, and extract key lessons. This step ensures that insights gained during the session translate into practical applications.

For the different Strategy Sims, a variety of debrief tools and methods are used.

Updated debrief format, using the Transform! 12, February 2025
Want to dig deeper?

Read the full Transform! 12 Leadership Skills: assessment.

10. Bringing Back Into Real Life

The final step in the Strategy Sims method is ensuring that the learnings are integrated into real-world business contexts. Participants leave with new strategic action plans, new perspectives on their leadership and future development, and a framework for applying their hard-won insights to their own organizations.

For corporate leaders, new innovation strategy, new financial insights and a clear transformation roadmap are common ‘action points’. For founders, accelerators and ecosystems, clear action plans for scaling up, growth and successful fundraising. For emerging fund managers, a clear understanding for the path to Fund III, deeper appreciation for paths to liquidity and exits, and of course, how to accelerate LP fundraising, are all common take aways.

Fund Managers from across Africa in the Fund Manager, @2X Global, Johannesburg, March 2024

Conclusion

The Strategy Sims method is a proven approach to experiential learning, strategic decision-making, and business model innovation. Whether used by corporate leaders, startup founders, or venture capitalists, Strategy Sims provide a powerful way to navigate complexity, test strategies, and drive successful outcomes.

Currently used in executive education programs, MBA & Master programs, ecosystem development programs, VC development, startup- and acceleration programs, large-scale corporate transformation projects, national competitiveness projects; Strategy Sims can be a superb value add to your programs in classrooms and board rooms worldwide.

Do you want to explore how to bring Strategy Sims into your organization, classroom or practice?

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Over the last 5 years I’ve had the unique opportunity to work with 250+ emerging fund managers across a wide range of programs, masterclasses, GP accelerators and coaching sessions. Funds have ranged from seed, venture, growth, SME, debt and PE. Geographies have ranged from Europe, MENA, Africa, APAC and the Americas.

In doing so, I’ve tried to pin down, what are core questions, I as a guide can use to support my emerging managers?

The Three Questions

Question 1: Have you ever made any investments in this strategy?

If so, can you talk me through the process? How did you perform? What did you learn?

Question 2: Have you ever worked at a fund or managed a fund?

If so, what were your primary deliverables? What did you achieve? What did you learn?

Question 3: Have you ever, personally, raised capital for a fund or a startup?

If so, what was your experience? What did you learn? How does that experience shape your thinking about fundraising for your own fund?

Why These Three Questions Matter

These questions serve as a diagnostic framework that reveals the depth of an emerging fund manager’s practical experience across the three core competencies required for fund management success: investment executionoperational expertise, and capital raising.

Each question probes a different dimension of readiness. The first explores whether they understand the mechanics of deploying capital and generating returns. The second examines their institutional knowledge of fund operations, from due diligence processes to portfolio management. The third assesses their appreciation for the challenges of fundraising and LP relationship management.

Together, these questions help me quickly identify where an emerging manager sits on the experience spectrum and what gaps need to be addressed in their journey toward launching a successful fund.

How Emerging Fund Managers Answer These Questions

The responses typically fall into several patterns:

The Experienced Operator: These managers usually have strong answers to questions 1 and 2, often drawing from years at established funds or corporate ventures. They can articulate specific investment processes and operational frameworks but may struggle with question 3, having never been on the fundraising side.

The Entrepreneur-Turned-Investor: These individuals excel at question 3, bringing deep empathy for founders and understanding of capital needs. However, they often have limited experience with questions 1 and 2, particularly around institutional investment processes and fund operations.

The Complete Novice: Some emerging managers have limited experience across all three areas. While this presents the steepest learning curve, it also represents the greatest opportunity for growth when paired with proper mentorship and structured learning.

The Industry Expert: These managers may have deep sector knowledge but limited hands-on investment experience. They typically perform well on the analytical aspects of question 1 but may lack practical deployment experience.

Case Studies

All case studies are anonymized, but based on one or more real-life emerging managers I’ve been lucky enough to work with.

Case Study A: Paal – Nordic Cleantech Fund

Paal approached me with plans to launch a €25M cleantech seed fund across the Nordics. His background was compelling—a former climate tech engineer turned sustainability consultant with extensive networks across Scandinavia’s green tech ecosystem.

Question 1 Response: Paal had made three angel investments over two years, all in Nordic cleantech startups. One had achieved a 3x return through acquisition, another had grown 200% in valuation, and the third was struggling. He could articulate his investment thesis clearly and had learned valuable lessons about the importance of regulatory tailwinds and customer validation in cleantech.

Question 2 Response: He had never worked at a fund but had served on two startup boards and helped design investment frameworks for a family office. His operational experience was limited to advisory roles, though he understood startup challenges intimately.

Question 3 Response: Paal had raised €500K for his own sustainability consulting firm and had a minor role in helping two portfolio companies raise follow-on rounds. He understood the founder’s perspective but had never experienced institutional fundraising.

Outcome: Paal’s limited investment track record but deep sector expertise made him an medium-attractive emerging manager.

We focused our conversations on understanding the fund’s business model, fund operations and LP relationship management. Two questions emerged here: one, how he could build a team to complement his skills, two, whether a fund vehicle truly was something for him.

As a part of the business model puzzle, we used the GP Working Capital Map to identify and discuss various ways he could finance the investment firm.

Case Study B: Aisha – UAE Fintech Fund

Aisha came from 8 years at a leading Middle Eastern bank, most recently as head of digital innovation. Previously, she held a junior role at a regional fund-of-fund. She proposed launching a $15M fintech fund targeting the UAE and broader GCC region, with a longer-term view on building a lasting investment firm.

Question 1 Response: Through her corporate role, Aisha had led strategic investments in five fintech startups, totaling $8M. Two investments had generated positive returns, and she maintained strong relationships with founders. However, these were strategic investments with different success metrics than financial returns.

Question 2 Response: While not at a traditional fund, Aisha had managed the bank’s innovation lab with a $20M annual budget. She understood due diligence, portfolio management, and had experience working with external fund managers on co-investments.

Question 3 Response: Aisha had never personally raised external capital but had some experience evaluating fund managers and understanding LP expectations from the LP side. One of her biggest gaps was simply understanding who her target ‘customers’ (LPs) were, how they made decisions and what the LP process looked like, ranging from hours to years, depending on the various LPs.

Outcome: Aisha’s banking experience and regional network positioned her well. Our conversations focused on transitioning from strategic to financial investing and developing fundraising skills. Notably, we spent time on mapping out LP personas, their decision making process and running this through the LP Process Canvas.

Case Study C: Priya – Thailand B2B SaaS Fund

Priya brought over 20 years of finance experience, including a decade at Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) across the US and Asia, with her most recent two years as a senior consultant to the International Finance Corporation (IFC). She proposed a $25M B2B SaaS fund focused on Thailand and Vietnam, targeting the growing digital transformation market in Southeast Asia.

Question 1 Response: Priya had extensive investment experience through her DFI roles, having deployed over $150M in development finance across 40+ transactions in Asia. However, most of these were infrastructure, financial inclusion, and SME financing deals. Her direct venture/tech investment experience was limited to three angel investments in Thai fintech and SaaS startups over the past five years, with mixed results. She understood institutional investment processes deeply but was adapting her framework to early-stage tech investing.

Question 2 Response: Her decade at DFIs provided substantial fund management experience, including portfolio oversight, due diligence leadership, and working with diverse stakeholder groups. At IFC, she had managed relationships with fund managers and co-investment programs. However, her experience was primarily in development finance rather than commercial venture capital, requiring adjustment to different risk profiles and return expectations.

Question 3 Response: Priya had extensive capital markets experience from the institutional side, having helped structure and raise funding for multiple DFI initiatives and worked closely with sovereign wealth funds and development banks. She understood LP motivations and fund structures intimately, though from the allocator rather than fund manager perspective. Her IFC experience included evaluating hundreds of fund managers, giving her deep insights into what LPs sought in emerging managers.

Outcome: Priya’s institutional credibility and extensive emerging markets experience made her a strong proposition for impact-focused LPs and DFIs, but also showed the challenges in unlocking new LP networks.

Our conversations focused on transitioning from development finance to commercial returns, understanding venture capital market dynamics, portfolio mark-ups, valuation methods and positioning her unique LP value proposition. Most importantly, we explored how to use the LP Stack to access new LP categories.

Insights I Gain From These Three Questions

These questions consistently reveal several key insights about emerging fund managers:

Track Record Depth: Managers with meaningful answers to question 1 typically have higher success rates in fundraising and early portfolio performance. Even a small number of investments provides crucial pattern recognition.

Operational Readiness: Question 2 reveals whether managers understand the operational complexity of running a fund, including meeting various LP requirements. Those with institutional experience build better fund management processes, including interactions with service providers.

Fundraising Realism: Question 3 often exposes unrealistic expectations about the fundraising process. Managers who have experienced fundraising from either side tend to build more realistic timelines and strategies. Emerging managers with limited experience tend to lack a structured fundraising process and often struggle to hit closing targets.

Development Priorities: The framework immediately highlights where coaching should focus, enabling more targeted and efficient preparation programs.

Recommendations for Emerging Fund Managers

Based on patterns observed across hundreds of conversations with these three questions, here are my key recommendations:

If you have limited investment experience (weak question 1 response):

  • Start angel investing immediately in your target sector
  • Join angel groups or syndicates to observe processes
  • Consider beginning in a more junior role at an established fund
  • Write up detailed investment memos to build experience
  • Suggested book to read: Venture Deals

If you lack operational fund experience (weak question 2 response):

If you haven’t raised capital (weak question 3 response):

  • Help companies with their fundraising processes (including any of your own portfolio companies)
  • Study successful fund marketing materials and strategies
  • Build relationships with potential LPs before you need them
  • Consider joining an existing fund in a dedicated capital formation role for 2-4 years
  • Suggested book to read: The Business of Venture Capital

Universal recommendations:

  • Be honest about your experience gaps
  • Build complementary teams that cover all three competencies
  • Start networking with LPs 24-36 months before launching fundraising
  • Develop a differentiated investment thesis based on your unique insights and access

The journey from aspiration to successful fund manager is exceptionally challenging but also achievable. Less than 25% of those that start actually make it. Out of these, just 66% make it to a successful fund III.

These three questions provide a roadmap for understanding where you are and what you need to develop. The most successful emerging managers I’ve worked with embrace their learning journey and systematically address gaps in their experience while building on their unique strengths.

Remember: every experienced fund manager was once emerging. The key is honest self-assessment, targeted development, combined with grit, hard work and execution toward your ultimate fund vision.

Good luck on your emerging fund manager story