Anthony Baratta

Anthony Baratta

Incentives Outlast Intent

Why organizations follow what they reward—not what they say Leaders declare new priorities. Focus shifts. Direction is set. The message is clear. Teams continue to behave as they did before. Not out of resistance. Because incentives did not change. Intent…

Reorganizations Don’t Fix Systems

Why moving boxes on an org chart rarely changes how work actually gets done Reorgs are the default response to misalignment. Boxes move. Reporting lines change. Titles adjust. The system remains largely the same. An organization chart is a model.…

You Cannot Transform What You Cannot See

Why most transformation efforts fail by acting on the visible system while the real one remains unchanged Most transformation efforts begin with action. Reorgs. New processes. New tools. Movement is visible. It signals intent. It creates momentum. It does not…

The Myth of Clean Execution

Why execution doesn’t follow strategy—it completes it under real constraints Execution is often framed as a downstream activity. Strategy sets direction. Teams execute. The model is simple. Decisions are made upfront. Work flows through the system. Outcomes follow. It suggests…

The Illusion of Alignment

Why Engineering, Product, and the Business Rarely Mean the Same Thing—and What Leaders Do About It At scale, misalignment isn’t accidental. It’s structural. Engineering optimizes for systems. Product optimizes for outcomes. The business optimizes for growth and timing. These are…

Planning Horizons Define System Behavior

Why the length of your planning horizon determines whether your system reacts, drifts, or stabilizes Short planning cycles feel adaptive. Long planning cycles feel rigid. Both are incomplete. Planning is often treated as a scheduling exercise. How far ahead to…

Reliability Is Designed, Not Tested

Why resilience is determined upstream—long before testing begins Most organizations treat reliability as a validation step. Add more tests. Extend QA cycles. Improve monitoring. Increase coverage. The assumption is simple. If enough defects are caught before release, the system will…

Autonomy Without Boundaries Creates Chaos

Why autonomy only works when its limits are explicit—and why undefined freedom leads to fragmentation Autonomy is one of the most overused concepts in engineering leadership. It is presented as a solution to speed. Give teams ownership. Remove friction. Let…

Dependencies Are the Real Architecture

Why delivery speed is constrained less by code—and more by the coordination required to move between teams System diagrams lie by omission. They show services, databases, and APIs. Clean boundaries. Clear ownership. Ordered flows. They do not show the work…