The Delivery OS + Anticipation Toolkit gives delivery teams a working rhythm — promises and governance, reporting, risk and escalation, accountability, and better meetings — so risk surfaces early and leadership is never surprised.
Most delivery problems aren’t capability problems. They’re operating-system problems — no shared rhythm, risk that hides until it’s late, decisions that never quite get made, and meetings that produce talk instead of movement.
Teams stuck in rescue mode treat every delivery as a heroic effort. Mature teams install an operating system: a promise and rhythm everyone can see, anticipation that surfaces risk early, governance that turns issues into decisions, accountability without blame, and meetings that end in movement. The Four Disciplines below are how a team climbs from reactive delivery to anticipatory delivery.
Define what the team commits to and the cadence that makes it real — so delivery is a rhythm, not a scramble.
Surface risk in plain language and escalate on a clear pathway, long before the deadline forces it into the open.
Hold commitments without blame — norms, recovery when something is missed, and the principle that clear is kind.
Fix the meetings and run the logs and scorecard that keep delivery visible and moving.
Each module solves a distinct delivery problem with a clear boundary — and is available on its own. Most teams start with the complete collection.
The operating system itself — the delivery promise and rhythm, governance and decisions, reporting and dashboard, and anticipation and proof.
Surface risk in plain language, escalate on a clear pathway, convert issues to decisions, and hold the no-surprise standard.
Hold commitments without blame — norms, what to do when a commitment is missed, recovery, and why clear is kind.
Audit your meetings, install better meeting templates, and run the logs and scorecard that keep delivery visible and moving.
The Complete Collection is the recommended offer — all four modules, the 30-day installation plan, editable templates and trackers, and the printable graphics. Individual modules and licenses are available too.
Broader internal use, editable templates, and customization rights.
Request a quote →A focused sprint to stand up the rhythm, governance, and reporting with your team.
Make risk surfacing and escalation safe and routine across the delivery org.
Redesign the delivery meeting system so meetings end in decisions and movement.
Ongoing support to embed the operating system and sustain delivery maturity.
A maturity model that maps the climb from reactive, rescue-mode delivery to anticipatory delivery — the frame the whole toolkit installs.
The simple rule that changes everything: leadership should never be surprised by a risk the team already saw. The toolkit makes that the default.
A fast read on the health of the operating system — where rhythm, anticipation, accountability, and meetings are strong or slipping.
No. It doesn’t replace your methodology or tooling — it installs the operating behaviors that make any methodology work: a visible delivery rhythm, early risk surfacing, real decisions, accountability without blame, and meetings that move. It sits on top of however you already run delivery.
Read the Delivery OS Model guide and set the delivery promise and rhythm first (Module 1). Then make risk and escalation safe (Module 2), hold accountability without drama (Module 3), and fix the meetings (Module 4). The 30-Day Installation Plan sequences all of it, and the Health Radar tracks it.
Yes — each module is available à la carte ($229–$249). Most teams start with the complete collection at $699 because the disciplines reinforce each other, but you can begin with the one that hurts most and add the rest later.
Yes. The guides come as PDF and Word, the trackers as an editable Excel pack, and the visual system as a printable graphics PDF — so you can adapt the templates, logs, and scorecards to how your team actually works.
Share a few details and we’ll get the toolkit to you — plus a suggested first discipline to install this month.