Tag: Execution Strategy

Security Is Not a Gate. It Is an Architecture Property.
Security Is Not a Gate. It Is an Architecture Property.

Security is treated as a gate at the end of delivery. It should be an architecture property designed into three distinct boundaries. Here is the model that fixes the friction between security and delivery.

Your Platform Team Is Building a Product Nobody Asked For.
Your Platform Team Is Building a Product Nobody Asked For.

Most platform teams build internal products their engineering teams never chose. Platform adoption is not a marketing problem. It is a product governance problem. Here is the model that fixes it.

Developer Experience Is Not a Perk. It Is a Delivery Control System.
Developer Experience Is Not a Perk. It Is a Delivery Control System.

Developer experience is not about making developers happy. It is about controlling the conditions that determine delivery output. Organizations that treat DX as a perk have removed the control system from their delivery engine without knowing it.

Monitoring Added After Deployment Is Not Observability. It Is Archaeology.
Monitoring Added After Deployment Is Not Observability. It Is Archaeology.

Observability is not a monitoring add-on. It is an architectural constraint. Systems built without observability baked in cannot be understood, cannot be governed, and cannot be improved. The OSAF model tells you exactly where your architecture is blind.

You Cannot Improve an Architecture You Have Not Measured.
You Cannot Improve an Architecture You Have Not Measured.

Enterprise architecture maturity is not a feeling. It is a score. Organizations that cannot measure their architecture maturity cannot improve it. The EAMS model gives you the score.