idigdata
The systems behind the work

I don't pitch the operator model. I run it.

Before I bring this to your business, I run it in mine. These are the systems that prove the model holds in production, not on a slide.

Thirty years of landing business-system transformations taught me one thing: the work dies in delivery, not design. So I built the systems that make delivery hold, and I run my own practice on them. You can watch them work.

The need that never went away

Transformation through business systems is still the hardest thing a company does.

High stakes, complex requirements, multiple teams and vendors to shepherd toward a finish line that keeps moving. It's why I've been hired for thirty years, and why the work has never dried up.

50+ implementations · 15+ transformations at scale, led end-to-end.

The systems below are not a theory of how to do this. They are what thirty years of doing it turned into.

The scarce role

Most can build a demo. Most can explain adoption. Few can carry the whole arc.

The market is full of people who can stand up an agent, and people who can talk about change management. The scarce role is the operator who can inspect the technology, own the business system around it, and carry the result through finance, compliance, vendors, workflows, and the people until it holds.

Operating proof

Three systems, all running. The proof isn't a slide; it's the model in production.

The Rig lockup — Orchestrate · Monitor · Invent

Built

The Rig = my accelerant

The governed build environment I run on. It keeps the work planned, gated, tested, and traceable, so delivery is repeatable instead of heroic and undocumented. This site was built in it.

BOSS lockup — Business Process Harness

Owned

BOSS = what you own

A transformation usually lives in the consultant's head and a stack of slides, then decays the day they leave. BOSS turns your operating reality into one governed system the business owns. You keep it.

DigOps lockup — Buy · Make · Sell

Run

DigOps = how it runs

An agent-native workflow machine that runs my practice today, with a human on every consequential call and workflows built alongside the people who run them.

What you own

What I leave you is an asset you own, not a service you rent.

At the end you hold the operating system of your transformation: the mapped workflows, the governed data, the validated SOPs, the decision record, documented to your standards so your own team, or any vendor you choose, can run and extend it.

Your people run it and extend it, so it keeps getting better after I leave. None of this was ever really about the software. The point is the people who run the work.

Continuity

One operator, and the work does not live in my head.

The systems are the answer. The work is observable as it runs. The asset is owned by the business. Your people are developed through the build. And senior independents come in for scoped packages when the work calls for it. If I step away, the system and the people remain.

If the mandate is real

I take on a small number of embedded mandates.

Your pilots are outrunning your governance. Your vendors are moving. Your board is asking about AI. If that's the room you're in, and the business is serious about owning the result, I can move the work.

Bring the real situation, and I'll walk you through exactly how I'd own it, live.

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