Delivering the UK’s Industrial Strategy: Why collaborative leadership matters now
The UK government’s much-anticipated 10-year Industrial Strategy marks more than a policy reset. It signals a major shift in how leaders in business, government, education, and civil society must work together, not as separate actors, but as strategic partners in shaping the future of the UK economy.
Announced alongside the Spending Review, the Strategic Defence Review, 10-year Infrastructure Strategy, and with the Trade Strategy and the NHS Plan expected to follow shortly, this blueprint sets a clear course for attracting investment and delivering long-term, sustainable growth and prosperity across the UK.
But strategy alone is not enough. Its success will hinge on bold, collaborative leadership that transcends traditional boundaries and drives concerted delivery.
From policy to partnership
The Prime Minister has framed this as a “golden opportunity”, with the strategy redefining the role of government, not as a top-down decision-maker, but as a partner to mobilise others.
This is more than a rhetorical shift. It’s a call for long-term thinking, partnership between sectors and sustained collaboration. Addressing complex challenges—from energy resilience to regional inequality—demands a new leadership mindset.
Building the foundations for long-term growth
The Industrial Strategy outlines long-term investment in eight high-growth sectors, ranging from technology and clean energy to advanced manufacturing, life sciences, defence, creative industries, financial services, and professional and business services, coupled with support for the foundations of a thriving economy.
Tackling energy costs, attracting more investment, increasing access to finance, investing in skills, enhancing R&D, and ensuring effective regulation, planning, and tax support are all part of this joined-up approach.
All these commitments to help improve the business environment should provide the kind of strategic clarity that leaders have sought to help attract investment in the UK to create jobs and growth.
Place-based growth and leadership
And perhaps most promising is the strategy’s emphasis on place-based economic growth across the UK’s regions and nations.
Increased partnerships with devolved governments, empowered mayors, businesses, education, civil society, and public agencies are central to attracting investment and driving innovation and inclusive growth. The regional 10-year plans will complement this approach, combining skills development, technology adoption and improved transport to build local prosperity.
This will depend on leadership that is responsive, collaborative, and takes a long-term view, while recognising that new ways of working are hard and new behaviours and cultures take time to develop and embed.
To secure this long-term perspective, investing in upskilling today’s and tomorrow’s leaders is vital to embrace new and disruptive thinking, digital fluency, and the collaborative mindset necessary for change.
Leading what’s next, for lasting growth
This is a moment for organisations like WIG to act as catalysts, bringing together leaders from government, business, education, and civil society to help create the leadership conditions for collaboration, meaningful delivery and transformation.
That’s why we are developing new ways to support delivery on the Industrial Strategy through national strategic dialogue, as well as supporting leaders on how to better deliver together across sectors in regions and nations.
Enabling leaders who can deliver
For over four decades, WIG has brought together current and future leaders from business, government, education, and the non-profit world to address shared challenges and seize new opportunities in a safe space, developing the skill set and mindset to lead in increasingly complex times.
A new framework has been set through the Industrial Strategy, and now it is time to help develop a new generation of leaders who will deliver on its strategic ambition of a better future for all.