Could you describe what you mean more specifically by strategic? Traditionally all NT's are described as strategic, but it's true that the strategy of an NTP looks differently than the strategy of an NTJ.
This will be hard, as I dont fully understand Ti and Te. It has been something I have been chewing on as of late, so please forgive and advise as it is quite raw.
But I think Ti allows for strategy in the sense of a chess game. Take a local context-the game with all of its possible steps, then make moves and anticipate all of the end results of given moves. So it is strategic, planned, controlled, precise and looking forward-in a very localized, controlled setting.
Another example-take a specific scenario at work and identify the localized Ti logical approach-For problem A, do action B. Utterly, totally correct logically.
However Te then asks-is this the consistant approach we apply to
all problems at this company? The answer is no. So why extend extra effort/energy/resources to apply action B on this specific instance of problem A? It is inefficient and
logically inconsistant with our big picture strategic approach. What will applying action B here mean to the other five departments the project has to pass through before becoming real?
Yet Ti will argue that we must do it for problem A and not seem to be able to understand/be willing to see the logical inconsistency in the big picture.
I picture little localized Ti connective blobs-each utterly correct in thier isolated context. But when combined in a global whole, they may now not be logically consistant-Te can see this as obvious.
Perhaps my position-sitting between R&D, Maunfacturing, QC and QA allows me to appreciate the inconsistancies. My ENTPs all have amazing ideas/solutions in localized contexts but are unaware of the big picture/long term implications once extended to the global context. It is like they cant understand how the Ti local chunks fit together?
Most biotech companies are started by ENTPs who torture everyone for awhile, and then sell the whole mess to a bunch of TJs to run.
NeTi has amazing, utterly awesome vision for the potentials, problems and myriad of solutions. But not strategic in the sense of how many different localized things aggregate-I can do a little but the NTJs kick ass here.