THE POST-PROJECT WORLD PODCAST SERIES
Why do enterprise transformation programmes slow down even when activity increases? In this episode, Luigi Pascal Rondanini tells the origin story of the Coordination Capital Framework — born not from a textbook but from a real treasury transformation programme at a medium-size regulated financial institution. When he reviewed the vendor's proposal, the functional scope scored 9.3 out of 10. The governance scored 5.5. That gap — between technology readiness and governance readiness — is where most enterprise programmes fail. From the 20 governance gaps discovered in that programme, 3 new concepts emerged that explain why transformation programmes degrade over time: Governance Friction — the expenditure of organisational effort that does not increase delivery capability. The meetings that produce no decisions. The reports that duplicate information already available. The approvals that consume weeks for changes that take hours. Friction is not waste. It's subtler. The activity might be legitimate. But the effort exceeds the governance value produced. Coordination Debt — the accumulated consequence of governance shortcuts. Deferred decisions. Incomplete evidence. Unvalidated assumptions. Skipped reviews. Informal approvals with no documented rationale. Each shortcut is small. The programme continues. But debt compounds. When the foundation is finally questioned, rework cascades through every layer built on top of it. The Throughput Trap — the cycle that locks programmes into decline. As Coordination Debt accumulates, Organisational Throughput — the finite capacity to process governance — declines. The response is to add more governance. More governance increases friction. Friction further reduces throughput. Activity rises. Progress falls. Everyone is busy. Nobody is moving forward. This episode also introduces the foundational insight behind the entire framework: enterprise transformation is fundamentally a coordination problem, not a technology problem. Two programmes with identical budgets, identical schedules, and identical technology can produce dramatically different outcomes. The difference lies in coordination capability. Projects don't fail because people stop working. They fail because people stop coordinating. The Coordination Capital Doctrine (published July 7, 2026) measures coordination as institutional capital. This episode describes the complementary governance layer: the methodology for running the transformation itself. The Doctrine measures. The Framework governs. Hosted by Luigi Pascal Rondanini, author of The Coordination Capital Doctrine and founder of OrbaOS. Keywords: governance friction, coordination debt, organisational throughput, enterprise transformation, programme governance, treasury transformation, coordination capital, governance operating system, vendor governance, stage gates, programme management, PMO, delivery risk, governance methodology, acceptance criteria, requirements traceability, performance obligations, governance gaps, coordination capability, programme failure, transformation governance, regulated financial institution, CFO governance, audit committee, risk management, OrbaOS, coordination capital framework, governance architecture, decision-making, evidence-based governance Topics/Categories: Business, Technology, Management
25 episodios
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