This book examines streamlined planning methodologies that enable entrepreneurs to establish strategic direction without elaborate documentation or analysis paralysis. It explores how businesses construct focused planning frameworks that prioritize critical assumptions, actionable decisions, and adaptive iteration over comprehensive forecasting. Through analysis of lean planning principles, hypothesis-driven strategy, and minimal documentation approaches, the book reveals patterns in how effective entrepreneurs distinguish essential strategic elements from planning theater. It addresses tensions between thoroughness and agility, investigating how successful founders maintain strategic coherence while remaining responsive to market feedback and emerging opportunities. Readers will explore systematic approaches to identifying core business hypotheses that require validation, structuring planning documents that facilitate decision-making rather than compliance, and building review rhythms that keep strategy relevant without consuming operational capacity. The book navigates challenges in satisfying stakeholder expectations for formal plans while avoiding over-specification that constrains adaptation, balancing structure with flexibility in uncertain market conditions, and maintaining strategic focus amid competing priorities. It reframes assumptions about what constitutes adequate planning and reveals how disciplined simplicity in strategic frameworks often produces better outcomes than elaborate projections. The focus remains on constructing planning systems that serve operational clarity and informed decision-making rather than demonstrating analytical sophistication.