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ABSTRACT This paper reassesses Igor Ansoff's strategic management frameworks and their relevance to organizations in today's turbulent environments. It focuses on three core ideas: environmental turbulence, strategic issue management, and growth vector analysis. The aim is to test whether these still help organizations adapt, reorganize, and innovate under rapid change. The study distinguishes between Ansoff's methodologies and his tools and procedures, emphasizing the latter as practical instruments for diagnosing, aligning, and executing strategy. Using cases from both private and public organizations, it shows how Ansoff's diagnostic tools, such as Strategic Business Area Attractiveness and Strategic Diagnosis/Posture , support adaptive decision‐making under different conditions of turbulence. Findings show that Ansoff's frameworks still hold strong value when applied with context. They help organizations align internal capabilities with external realities, avoid strategic myopia, and manage uncertainty with structure and discipline. Three applications were selected to illustrate tool flexibility and applicability. While some assumptions in Ansoff's logic need revision for smaller or less formal organizations, his systematic approach to strategic adaptation remains both relevant and effective. The paper concludes that Ansoff's tools, grounded in practice and validated through application, continue to provide a clear and useful roadmap for managing strategic change in complex environments.