Anthony Baratta

Anthony Baratta

Ambiguity Expands to Fill the System

Why unclear decisions spread complexity faster than most organizations can absorb it Ambiguity never stays contained. One unclear ownership boundary creates coordination overhead elsewhere. One undefined priority forces interpretation across multiple teams. The organization adapts through meetings, escalation, and constant…

What Leadership Ignores

How Executive Attention Shapes Technology Outcomes More Than Strategy Most organizations don’t execute on strategy. They execute on what leadership repeatedly notices, questions, and reinforces. What gets reviewed improves. What gets ignored drifts. Not immediately. But predictably. Technology systems rarely…

Informal Systems Always Win

Why the real organization is defined by operational behavior—not documented process Every organization has two systems. The documented one. And the one people actually use to get work done. Under pressure, the informal system always wins. Work flows through trust,…

Coordination Is a Tax on Scale

Why growing organizations slow down as alignment costs expand faster than output capacity More teams don’t just create more output. They create more coordination. At scale, coordination becomes a structural tax.And eventually, maintaining alignment consumes more energy than execution itself.…

Every Exception Becomes a Policy

Why temporary workarounds quietly harden into permanent operating complexity Most organizational complexity doesn’t come from major decisions. It comes from tolerated exceptions. Each feels isolated. Together, they become the operating model.

Complexity Is the Default Outcome

Why organizational complexity is not a failure state—but the natural result of unmanaged growth Most organizations treat complexity as accidental. It isn’t. Complexity is the default outcome of scale. Every dependency, workaround, exception, and coordination path accumulates naturally unless actively…

The Cost of Partial Fixes

Why isolated improvements decay when the surrounding system remains unchanged Most organizations improve continuously. New processes. Better planning. Clearer ownership. The problem is not that these changes fail. It’s that they rarely compound. Because systems respond to interaction—not isolated fixes.…

Stability Is an Outcome, Not a Goal

Why stable organizations are shaped by aligned systems—not constant intervention Most organizations try to enforce stability directly. More controls. More oversight. More process. But stability isn’t something you impose on a system.It’s something the system produces. When planning, incentives, ownership,…

Change Fails at the Interface

Why most transformation efforts break at the boundaries—where ownership, decisions, and coordination collide Most transformations focus on teams and systems. They miss the real problem. Friction doesn’t live inside components. It lives at the boundaries between them. Hand-offs. Shared ownership.…