Quick Fit Check: Could an Execution Architecture Audit Help?
Answer five yes/no questions about a specific business problem your organization is stuck on. You’ll get a fit score plus benchmark context showing how commonly these patterns are reported.
1) Has this problem been discussed in multiple meetings without reaching a resolution that holds?
The problem gets debated, a direction is set, but it resurfaces — different quarter, same conversation.
2) Has a chosen solution been reversed or restarted after work was already underway?
The fix was approved, execution began, then direction changed — causing rework, lost time, or eroded confidence.
3) Is it unclear who has the authority to make the final call on this problem?
Multiple people believe they own it — or nobody does. Escalations are frequent. Ownership shifts depending on who’s in the room.
4) Do approvals, handoffs, or committee reviews regularly add weeks to progress on this issue?
Time lost to routing, sign-offs, cross-functional alignment, or waiting for the right people to be available.
5) Do people disagree about what kind of problem this is — whether it needs a definitive answer, a best-available bet, or something designed from scratch?
Some people want certainty before acting. Others want to move on a best guess. Others think the answer needs to be invented. The method keeps changing because no one agrees on what type of problem they’re solving.
Decision Structure Diagnostic — Quick Fit Report
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