Audacity
Architecture

A practice for building courageously sustainable work environments.

In the course of my professional lifetime—from directing massive enterprise healthcare implementations to running a state-wide youth coalition—I have spent a lot of time observing systems under stress.

When a project or team struggles, deadlines slip, or communication gets jammed, the focus often turns toward the people doing the work. Questions get asked about individual capability, work ethic, or alignment.

My practice approaches the situation from a different baseline. I look at the physical and structural environments those individuals are forced to work within.

My work operates on the belief that people rationally adapt to the structures built for them. If a team quietly holds back project risks until the very last minute, or if individuals work every weekend to patch over a struggling vendor's mistakes, I see that as a successful survival adaptation to a flawed environment.

To change the behavior, my method focuses on reorienting or redesigning the ecosystem. I try to figure out what structural gaps are blocking the team, and I work to provide the tools, authority, and actual capacity the people need to cross the finish line whole.

I call this Audacity Architecture. It’s anchored by six principles that I have learned through trial, error, and building operational frameworks across multiple industries.

The Six Principles of Audacity Architecture

Using This in Real Work

Understanding the architecture is only the first step. Applying it in day-to-day delivery requires distinguishing signal from noise, protecting your team, and knowing when a system dynamic is driving an outcome more than an individual's actions.