Salt, Sandwiches, and Steel: Why CEOs Can’t Run Everything With the Same Logic
- Sunil Dutt Jha
- Apr 13
- 3 min read
“Salt is a product. Steel is a capability. One runs on price. The other holds up nations. So why do most CEOs manage both the same way?”
We’re not just facing a leadership crisis. We’re facing a classification failure.
In boardrooms and strategy meetings, one mistake gets made over and over again: CEOs, investors, and policymakers apply the same business logic across everything—whether they’re selling toothpaste, booking hotel rooms, or managing a blast furnace.

But when you use the same ROI-first, margin-optimized playbook across every asset, something eventually breaks. And when it does, it’s never the salt that hurts you. It’s the steel.
The Commodity Illusion: Treating Organs Like Ingredients
In the modern MBA world, business is taught as a universal game:
Reduce cost
Increase scale
Maximize return
Exit if margins fall
That logic works for low-stakes, high-volume businesses:Fast food. Retail. Salt production. Shampoo distribution.
But the danger begins when leaders fail to distinguish between commodity and capability.
Steel isn’t just a commodity. It’s the raw nerve of infrastructure. Lose it, and you don’t just lose a business—you lose industrial autonomy, military readiness, and economic leverage.
This is where the British Steel story becomes a cautionary tale.
Case in Point: British Steel and the Logic Misfire
British Steel’s Long Products Division wasn’t sexy. It didn’t have 30% margins or a venture-backed narrative.
It produced:
Rails
Rebars
Beams and Angles
Wire Rods
In other words: the literal skeleton of infrastructure.
From 2007 to 2025, three owners made the same error:
Tata treated it as a loss-making unit and walked
Greybull saw it as a turnaround bet
Jingye demanded subsidies and nearly shut it down
At no point did anyone say: “Wait. This isn’t salt. This is an organ.”
And that’s the core flaw. They managed a national backbone like it was a line of business.
The Salt vs Aircraft Test: Classify Before You Lead
Here’s a simple test for CEOs, investors, and strategy heads:
Is what you’re managing salt—or is it an aircraft?
Salt is replicable, cheap, and replaceable.
Aircraft involves complex design, long timelines, and sovereign implications.
One is about cost. The other is about capability.
Now apply this to:
Steel? → Aircraft
National cloud/data infra? → Aircraft
E-commerce storefront? → Salt
Energy grid controls? → Organ
Yet most CEOs apply the same tools to all of them: Same org design. Same KPIs. Same exit strategy.
And that’s why collapses often feel like “sudden shocks.
”They’re not.
They’re the accumulation of misclassification.
What’s Missing: Enterprise Capability Classification
We don’t need more operational dashboards. We need an Enterprise Classification
Layer that tells you:
What’s a product vs what’s a backbone
What’s extractable vs what’s critical
What can scale vs what must stabilize
That’s what Enterprise Anatomy was built for.
At ICMG, we’ve helped organizations define which parts of their enterprise are:
Organs (core capability)
Bones (infrastructure support)
Muscle (operational execution)
Skin (interface with the market)
Salt (replaceable commodity streams)
When you see this, you stop using restaurant logic for aircraft engines. And you stop expecting quarterly profits from systems that were designed for generational resilience.
Logic Isn’t the Problem. Classification Is.
We’re not against logic. We’re against flattening all logic into one framework.
Salt isn’t bad. Sandwiches aren’t wrong. But when you run a nation’s industrial core—or your company’s product backbone—with the same thinking you use for a commodity line?
You don’t just mismanage.
You hollow out your future.
Let’s bring classification back to the boardroom—before more organs are mistaken for salt.
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