Why do so many organizations struggle to keep up-even when their strategies are clear, their people are capable, and their technology is world-class?
This book begins with a simple but uncomfortable truth: the pace of strategy has outstripped the ability of organizations to adapt how they actually work. Leaders are urged to "be more agile," yet agility is treated as an aspiration rather than something that can be deliberately designed. The result is frustration, stalled transformations, and organizations that feel permanently behind the curve.
Drawing on decades of experience across energy, construction, power, retail, healthcare, and high-growth ventures, the authors uncover what traditional management thinking has missed. Modern organizations are still built on operating models designed for a slower, more predictable world-models that separate process, roles, governance, and metrics into disconnected silos. That approach no longer holds when change is constant and complexity is the norm.
From this insight emerges a new discipline: the Science of Operating Models.
Rather than treating operating models as vague diagrams or abstract concepts, this book shows how they can be designed as coherent, measurable systems-functional networks that balance stability with speed. It introduces a clear language and structure for understanding how work truly flows, how decisions are made, and how value is delivered across the enterprise.
Why call it a science? Because while almost every executive claims to have an operating model, very few can define it, visualize it, or evolve it with confidence. Without a shared framework, organizations rely on intuition, consultants, or trial and error. The Science of Operating Models replaces guesswork with clarity, giving leaders and teams the ability to see, test, and adapt their own systems in real time.
This capability is becoming critical as AI enters the enterprise. As human and machine decision-making converge, undefined operating models risk turning organizations into efficient but unintelligible black boxes. A clear operating model ensures that people, processes, automation, and AI agents operate with shared context and intent-designed as one integrated system, not competing layers.
Early applications of this approach have already delivered results in weeks, not years. Teams gain alignment faster, build self-sufficiency, and learn to think systemically rather than chasing isolated fixes. But the book makes clear: this is not a one-time transformation tool. It is a foundation for continuous adaptation.
Part manifesto, part practical framework, The Operating Model Imperative is written for leaders who sense that traditional management methods are no longer enough. It is for those who understand that in a world defined by speed, complexity, and AI, the operating model is no longer a back-office concern-it is the engine and nervous system of the enterprise.
This book offers a blueprint for building organizations designed not just to perform, but to adapt-at the speed of change.