
Big Freight Life Framework
Version 1.0
A framework for designing AI-enabled systems that improve decision-making, experiences, and measurable business outcomes.
Big Freight Life
Deliver with intent
Volume I
Philosophy
Chapter 01
The Experience Gap
Core Principle
Artificial intelligence did not redefine experience design.
It revealed what experience design has always been.
For decades, organizations largely associated experience design with interfaces. Screens became the visible representation of the discipline, and over time many organizations began treating the artifact as the work itself.
The interface became the destination.
It never was.
Experience has always been created by the interaction of people, decisions, workflows, business models, governance, technology, operations, marketing, sales, customer success, and leadership.
The interface is simply where those interactions become visible.
As organizations deploy AI across products, operations, customer service, internal tools, and decision-making, they are discovering that success depends less on the intelligence of the model and more on the quality of the system surrounding it.
The model is rarely the limiting factor.
The organization usually is.
Definition
The Experience Gap is the distance between where organizations believe experience is created and where experience is actually created.
The Problem
Organizations often optimize interfaces while overlooking the systems that determine whether those interfaces succeed.
They improve screens while decisions remain fragmented.
They modernize applications while workflows remain inefficient.
They invest in AI while governance remains undefined.
They redesign products while the customer journey breaks long before anyone reaches the interface.
Technology improves.
Business outcomes often do not improve at the same rate.
Not because the technology failed.
Because the system was never designed to support it.
Why It Matters
Most organizations will have access to similar AI technologies.
Competitive advantage will come from how effectively they integrate those technologies into business operations, decision-making, governance, and customer experiences.
Organizations that understand experience as a business capability create advantages that are significantly harder to replicate.
The Framework
Experience is created through the interaction of:
- Business strategy
- Value creation
- Marketing
- Sales
- Customer success
- Operations
- Policies
- Workflows
- Decision architecture
- Governance
- Technology
- AI systems
- People
These are not isolated business functions.
They are different perspectives on the same experience.
Business Implications
Organizations that continue organizing design around interfaces unintentionally limit the value design can create.
Organizations that organize around experience improve decision-making, reduce operational friction, increase customer value, and improve returns on technology investments.
Expected Outcomes
Organizations adopting this perspective can expect:
- Better business decisions.
- Better organizational alignment.
- Better customer experiences.
- Better operational efficiency.
- More effective AI adoption.
- Higher return on technology investments.
- Sustainable competitive advantage.
Related
Principles
- Experience Design Has Always Been Pervasive
- The Interface Is an Artifact
- The Outcome Is the Measure
- Business Before Interface
Capabilities
- Experience Strategy
- Business Thinking
- Decision Architecture
- Organizational Design
- Governance
- AI Systems Thinking
Services
- Executive Advisory
- Organizational Transformation
- Experience Architecture
- AI Systems Architecture
Questions for Leaders
- Where does your organization believe experience is created?
- What systems shape customer outcomes before anyone reaches an interface?
- Are your AI investments improving business capability or only technology?
Chapter 02
Experience Design Has Always Been Pervasive
Core Principle
Experience design has always been pervasive.
It has always existed anywhere people interact with an organization.
Long before someone opens an application or visits a website, an experience has already begun.
Marketing establishes expectations.
Sales establishes trust.
Operations determines delivery.
Policies determine consistency.
Leadership shapes culture.
Technology enables execution.
The interface is where those decisions become visible.
It has never been where the experience begins.
Artificial intelligence did not expand the scope of experience design.
It exposed the consequences of treating experience too narrowly.
Definition
Pervasive Experience Design is the practice of intentionally designing the complete system that creates an experience, not merely the interface through which the experience is expressed.
The Problem
Many organizations unintentionally organize design around interfaces.
As a result:
- Business strategy is disconnected from customer experience.
- Operational friction is accepted as someone else's problem.
- Design teams are brought into conversations too late.
- AI initiatives optimize tasks instead of transforming systems.
- Business leaders question the value of design because design has been limited to production.
The issue is not the discipline.
The issue is how the discipline has been defined.
Why It Matters
Organizations compete through experiences, not interfaces.
Customers evaluate the entire journey:
- The promise.
- The purchase.
- The onboarding.
- The support.
- The delivery.
- The outcome.
Every interaction contributes to the experience.
Organizations that understand this design better businesses, not just better products.
The Framework
Experience design should intentionally influence:
- Business strategy
- Value creation
- Marketing
- Sales
- Customer success
- Operations
- Service delivery
- Workflow design
- Decision architecture
- Governance
- Technology
- AI systems
- Organizational capability
These are not independent disciplines.
They are different perspectives on the same experience.
Business Implications
When experience design is treated as a pervasive capability, organizations make better decisions earlier, reduce organizational friction, improve AI adoption, and create stronger alignment between strategy and execution.
The business benefits because design is contributing where value is actually created.
Expected Outcomes
Organizations adopting this perspective can expect:
- Better alignment across business functions.
- Earlier involvement of design in strategic decisions.
- More effective AI implementation.
- Stronger customer experiences.
- Reduced operational friction.
- Greater return on design and technology investments.
Related
Principles
- The Experience Gap
- The Interface Is an Artifact
- Business Before Interface
- The Outcome Is the Measure
Capabilities
- Experience Strategy
- Business Thinking
- Organizational Design
- Decision Architecture
- AI Systems Thinking
Services
- Executive Advisory
- Experience Architecture
- Organizational Transformation
- Design Organization Transformation
Questions for Leaders
- Where does your organization believe customer experience begins?
- Which business functions currently shape the experience but operate independently?
- Is design influencing strategy or primarily producing deliverables?
Chapter 03
The Interface Is an Artifact
Core Principle
The interface is an artifact.
It is the visible result of countless decisions made across an organization.
Business strategy.
Customer research.
Marketing.
Sales.
Operations.
Policies.
Workflow.
Governance.
Technology.
Data.
Artificial intelligence.
Leadership.
Every one of these influences the experience before an interface ever appears.
An interface can only express the quality of the system behind it.
It cannot compensate for a system that was never designed well.
Definition
An artifact is the observable output of a system.
Interfaces, dashboards, mobile applications, websites, conversational agents, emails, notifications, and generated user interfaces are all artifacts.
They communicate the decisions that have already been made.
They do not replace those decisions.
The Problem
Many organizations evaluate design almost exclusively through its artifacts.
Screens become the measure of progress.
Wireframes become the definition of design.
Prototypes become the evidence of value.
This creates a dangerous illusion.
Teams spend significant effort refining interfaces while the business processes, governance, decision-making, and operational systems that determine customer outcomes remain unchanged.
The artifact improves.
The experience does not.
Why It Matters
As AI becomes embedded throughout organizations, interfaces become increasingly dynamic.
Some interfaces will be generated in real time.
Some will disappear entirely.
Some experiences will happen through voice, automation, APIs, background agents, or workflows with no traditional interface at all.
If organizations define experience design by the interface, they will continually chase changing technology.
If they define experience by the system that creates it, their thinking remains durable regardless of how technology evolves.
The Framework
Design should intentionally shape:
- Business decisions
- Organizational capability
- Customer journeys
- Operational workflows
- Decision architecture
- Governance
- Information flow
- AI behavior
- Human collaboration
Interfaces express these systems.
They do not replace them.
Business Implications
Organizations that optimize artifacts without improving systems eventually reach diminishing returns.
Organizations that improve systems create better interfaces naturally because the interface reflects a healthier organization.
Design becomes a driver of business capability instead of a production function.
Expected Outcomes
Organizations adopting this principle can expect:
- Better alignment between business strategy and design.
- More resilient customer experiences.
- Reduced organizational friction.
- More effective AI integration.
- Greater return from design investments.
- Interfaces that reflect stronger underlying systems.
Related
Principles
- The Experience Gap
- Experience Design Has Always Been Pervasive
- The Outcome Is the Measure
- Design the System
Capabilities
- Experience Strategy
- Decision Architecture
- Workflow Design
- Organizational Design
- AI Systems Thinking
Services
- Experience Architecture
- AI Systems Architecture
- Executive Advisory
- Organizational Transformation
Questions for Leaders
- What organizational decisions are your interfaces expressing?
- If every interface disappeared tomorrow, would the underlying system still create a great experience?
- Are you investing more in artifacts than in the systems that produce them?
Chapter 04
The Outcome Is the Measure
Core Principle
The interface is an artifact.
The outcome is the measure.
Organizations often celebrate what they can see: interfaces, prototypes, feature releases, dashboards, and presentations.
Those artifacts have value.
But they are not the ultimate measure of success.
The real measure is what changed because of them.
Did customers succeed?
Did employees make better decisions?
Did adoption improve?
Did operational friction decrease?
Did the business create more value?
Experience design exists to improve outcomes.
Artifacts are only one means of achieving them.
Definition
An outcome is a measurable change in business performance, customer experience, organizational capability, or operational effectiveness resulting from intentional design.
Artifacts communicate work.
Outcomes demonstrate value.
The Problem
Organizations frequently measure design activity instead of design impact.
Teams report:
- Screens delivered.
- Features shipped.
- Prototypes completed.
- Design systems expanded.
These metrics describe production.
They do not describe value.
When organizations mistake output for outcome, they optimize for activity instead of impact.
Why It Matters
As AI accelerates software development, organizations will be able to produce interfaces faster than ever.
Production becomes easier.
Differentiation does not.
Competitive advantage increasingly depends on improving decisions, workflows, governance, customer value, and organizational capability.
Those are outcomes.
Organizations that measure outcomes build stronger businesses than organizations that measure production.
The Framework
Experience design should intentionally improve:
- Customer outcomes
- Business outcomes
- Operational outcomes
- Decision quality
- Organizational capability
- Employee effectiveness
- AI effectiveness
- Long-term business value
Artifacts should always support these outcomes.
They should never become the objective themselves.
Business Implications
Organizations that evaluate design through outcomes make better investment decisions.
They align design with executive priorities.
They increase confidence in AI initiatives.
They demonstrate measurable return on investment.
Design becomes a strategic capability rather than a production function.
Expected Outcomes
Organizations adopting this principle can expect:
- Better executive alignment.
- Better investment decisions.
- Stronger customer outcomes.
- More effective AI adoption.
- Higher organizational performance.
- Clearer measurement of design value.
Related
Principles
- The Experience Gap
- Experience Design Has Always Been Pervasive
- The Interface Is an Artifact
- Business Before Interface
Capabilities
- Experience Strategy
- Business Thinking
- Decision Architecture
- Organizational Design
- Measurement and Governance
Services
- Executive Advisory
- Organizational Transformation
- Experience Architecture
- AI Strategy
Questions for Leaders
- How does your organization currently measure the value of design?
- Which metrics reflect production rather than outcomes?
- What business results should experience design be accountable for?
Chapter 05
Business Before Interface
Core Principle
Business before interface.
Every interface exists to serve a business objective.
Whether the objective is growth, retention, operational efficiency, customer satisfaction, revenue, trust, or compliance, the interface is only one mechanism for achieving it.
Experience designers should understand the business before they attempt to improve the experience.
Without that understanding, design becomes decoration rather than strategy.
Definition
Business Before Interface means understanding why the organization exists, how it creates value, who it serves, how it competes, and what outcomes it is trying to achieve before making design decisions.
Design begins with purpose.
Interfaces communicate that purpose.
The Problem
Many design teams are introduced to projects after key business decisions have already been made.
They receive requirements instead of participating in defining them.
Research often starts with stakeholder debriefs instead of independent investigation into the business, market, competitors, operations, and constraints.
As a result, designers solve the problem they were handed instead of validating whether it is the right problem.
The interface improves.
The business opportunity may not.
Why It Matters
Organizations invest in design because they expect business value.
They expect:
- Better decisions.
- Better customer experiences.
- Higher adoption.
- Greater operational efficiency.
- Stronger competitive positioning.
- Measurable return on investment.
Those outcomes require business understanding, not interface expertise alone.
The Framework
Experience design should begin by understanding:
- The business model.
- Value creation.
- Customer needs and behaviors.
- Marketing and positioning.
- Sales and revenue generation.
- Operations and service delivery.
- Decision-making.
- Governance and risk.
- Technical capabilities and constraints.
- Success metrics.
Only then should the interface be designed.
Business Implications
Organizations that involve design earlier create stronger alignment between strategy and execution.
Design becomes a contributor to business decisions instead of a downstream production function.
The result is greater organizational impact and a clearer return on investment.
Expected Outcomes
Organizations adopting this principle can expect:
- Better strategic alignment.
- Better product decisions.
- Better customer outcomes.
- More effective collaboration across business functions.
- Higher confidence in AI and technology investments.
- Greater business value from design.
Related
Principles
- The Experience Gap
- Experience Design Has Always Been Pervasive
- The Interface Is an Artifact
- The Outcome Is the Measure
Capabilities
- Business Thinking
- Experience Strategy
- Customer Understanding
- Decision Architecture
- Organizational Design
Services
- Executive Advisory
- Experience Strategy
- Organizational Transformation
- Design Leadership Advisory
Questions for Leaders
- Does your design team understand how your business creates value?
- Are designers participating in business decisions or reacting to them?
- What would change if design were involved before requirements were written?
Chapter 06
Organizations Create Experiences
Core Principle
Organizations create experiences.
Customers do not experience departments.
They experience promises made by marketing.
Expectations established by sales.
Products delivered by engineering.
Services provided by operations.
Support delivered by customer success.
Policies defined by leadership.
Technology enables these interactions, but organizations orchestrate them.
Every decision contributes to the experience.
Every team influences the outcome.
Experience design exists to understand, align, and intentionally shape those interactions.
Definition
An organization is the system responsible for producing experiences.
Every function contributes to the customer's perception of value.
Experience is an organizational capability before it becomes an interface.
The Problem
Many organizations assign ownership of experience to a single team.
Design owns the interface.
Marketing owns awareness.
Sales owns acquisition.
Operations owns delivery.
Support owns customer issues.
Each team optimizes locally.
Few optimize the complete experience.
The result is fragmented ownership, inconsistent decisions, duplicated effort, and customer journeys that break at organizational handoffs.
Why It Matters
Artificial intelligence increases the speed at which organizations operate.
It does not eliminate organizational complexity.
If workflows, governance, decision-making, and accountability remain fragmented, AI simply scales those problems faster.
Organizations that intentionally align their people, processes, technology, and decisions create experiences that competitors struggle to replicate.
The Framework
Organizations create experiences through the interaction of:
- Leadership
- Business strategy
- Marketing
- Sales
- Product
- Design
- Engineering
- Operations
- Customer Success
- Governance
- Data
- Technology
- AI systems
Experience design provides the connective tissue between these functions.
Its responsibility is not to own every function.
Its responsibility is to understand how they work together.
Business Implications
Organizations that treat experience as a shared capability improve collaboration, reduce organizational friction, align investments with strategy, and increase the value created by technology.
Experience becomes an organizational advantage rather than the responsibility of a single department.
Expected Outcomes
Organizations adopting this principle can expect:
- Better cross-functional collaboration.
- Better organizational alignment.
- More consistent customer experiences.
- Faster decision-making.
- Improved AI readiness.
- Greater long-term business value.
Related
Principles
- The Experience Gap
- Experience Design Has Always Been Pervasive
- Business Before Interface
- The Outcome Is the Measure
Capabilities
- Organizational Design
- Experience Strategy
- Business Thinking
- Decision Architecture
- Governance
Services
- Executive Advisory
- Organizational Transformation
- Experience Architecture
- Design Organization Transformation
Questions for Leaders
- Who owns the customer experience in your organization?
- Where do organizational handoffs create friction?
- Are business functions optimizing independently or as one system?
Volume II
Operating Model
Chapter 07
The Capability Framework
Core Principle
Organizations do not transform because they purchase better technology.
They transform because they build stronger capabilities.
Technology amplifies capability. It does not replace it.
Definition
The Capability Framework is the collection of organizational capabilities required to design, operate, and continuously improve modern AI-enabled systems.
Capabilities
- Business Thinking
- Experience Strategy
- Customer Understanding
- Workflow Design
- Decision Architecture
- Governance
- Organizational Design
- AI Systems Thinking
- Technical Fluency
- Measurement and Continuous Learning
Why It Matters
Capability compounds over time. Tools change. Models change. Capabilities remain.
Business Implications
Organizations investing in capability improve execution, reduce risk, and increase the return on technology investments.
Expected Outcomes
- Better decisions
- Better alignment
- Better AI adoption
- Better customer outcomes
- Sustainable competitive advantage
Chapter 08
Decision Architecture
Core Principle
Every experience is the result of decisions.
Interfaces communicate decisions.
Systems execute decisions.
Organizations compete on the quality of their decisions.
Definition
Decision Architecture is the intentional design of how decisions are made, supported, delegated, automated, governed, and measured across people and AI systems.
Framework
- Decision ownership
- Authority
- Escalation
- Human oversight
- AI participation
- Governance
- Measurement
Expected Outcomes
- Faster decisions
- Better governance
- Better AI reliability
- Better business outcomes
Chapter 09
Design the System
Core Principle
Design the system.
The interface reflects the system.
It cannot overcome a poorly designed one.
Definition
Systems design is the intentional design of relationships between people, workflows, decisions, governance, technology, and AI.
Framework
- Workflows
- Decision flows
- Information flow
- Human-AI collaboration
- Governance
- Feedback loops
- Continuous improvement
Expected Outcomes
- Better organizational alignment
- Better execution
- More resilient AI initiatives
- Better customer experiences
Chapter 10
Delivered with Intent
Core Principle
Every decision communicates intent.
Every workflow embodies intent.
Every interface expresses intent.
Organizations always deliver intent---whether intentional or accidental.
Our responsibility is to make that intent explicit, aligned, and measurable.
Definition
Delivered with Intent is the commitment to intentionally design every element that contributes to customer and business outcomes.
Framework
Intent should exist across:
Expected Outcomes
- Clearer strategy
- Better execution
- Better experiences
- Better business outcomes
Chapter 11
Workflow Architecture
Capability Overview
Workflow Architecture intentionally designs how work flows between people, systems, AI, and business functions from initiation to completion.
Problem It Solves
Fragmented handoffs, unclear ownership, bottlenecks, duplicated work, and poor automation.
Inputs
- Business objectives
- Customer needs
- Policies
- Roles
- Systems
- AI capabilities
Core Components
- States
- Transitions
- Handoffs
- Decision points
- Escalations
- Automation
- Human review
- Feedback loops
Operating Principles
- Design workflows before automating them.
- Every workflow has an owner.
- AI should reduce friction.
Failure Modes
- Bottlenecks
- Duplicate work
- Orphaned tasks
- Poor orchestration
Metrics
- Cycle time
- Throughput
- Rework
- Automation rate
Business Outcomes
- Faster execution
- Better collaboration
- Reduced friction
- Better outcomes
Chapter 12
Governance Architecture
Capability Overview
Governance Architecture establishes policies, authority, oversight, controls, and accountability across people and AI.
Core Components
- Policies
- Roles
- Authority
- Oversight
- Auditability
- Escalation
- Monitoring
Operating Principles
- Governance enables execution.
- Accountability is explicit.
- AI requires governance by design.
Failure Modes
- Compliance failures
- Shadow processes
- Unclear ownership
Metrics
- Audit success
- Exception rate
- Policy adherence
Business Outcomes
- Trust
- Reduced risk
- Better compliance
- Sustainable AI adoption
Chapter 13
AI Systems Architecture
Capability Overview
AI Systems Architecture designs workflows, decisions, governance, orchestration, context, memory, tool use, and human oversight.
Operating Principles
- Design the system above the model.
- Models change; architecture endures.
- Reliability comes from systems.
Core Components
- Orchestration
- Context
- Memory
- Tool use
- Human review
- Evaluation
- Observability
- Governance
Failure Modes
- Weak orchestration
- Missing governance
- Fragile automation
Metrics
- Reliability
- Task success
- Override rate
- Business impact
Business Outcomes
- Reliable AI
- Better governance
- Faster implementation
- Business value
Chapter 14
Human–AI Collaboration
Capability Overview
Human–AI Collaboration designs authority, trust, escalation, review, communication, and learning between humans and AI.
Core Components
- Human-in-the-loop
- Human-on-the-loop
- Escalation
- Confidence
- Review
- Feedback
- Learning
Operating Principles
- AI augments judgment.
- Humans remain accountable.
- Confidence determines escalation.
Failure Modes
- Overtrust
- Undertrust
- Automation bias
Metrics
- Acceptance rate
- Override rate
- Decision quality
- Time saved
Business Outcomes
- Better decisions
- Higher trust
- Safer AI adoption
- Better experiences
Volume III
Architectural Foundations
Chapter 15
Information Architecture
Capability Overview
Information Architecture ensures the right information reaches the right person, system, or AI at the right time with the right context.
Problem It Solves
Organizations rarely suffer from a lack of information. They suffer from fragmented, duplicated, stale, and inaccessible information.
Inputs
- Business knowledge
- Policies
- Data sources
- Content
- Metadata
- User needs
Core Components
- Information models
- Taxonomy
- Metadata
- Context
- Retrieval
- Ownership
- Lifecycle
- Knowledge relationships
Operating Principles
- Information should be understandable.
- Context is part of the information.
- AI is only as effective as the information it receives.
Failure Modes
- Information silos
- Duplicate knowledge
- Poor retrieval
- Lost context
- AI hallucinations caused by poor information quality
Metrics
- Findability
- Information quality
- Retrieval success
- Knowledge reuse
Business Outcomes
- Better decisions
- Better AI performance
- Reduced duplication
- Faster execution
Chapter 16
Authority Architecture
Capability Overview
Authority Architecture establishes who is empowered to decide, approve, delegate, override, and remain accountable.
Problem It Solves
Unclear authority produces slow decisions, duplicated approvals, conflicting actions, and weak accountability.
Core Components
- Decision rights
- Delegation
- Approval
- Escalation
- Accountability
- Override
- Trust boundaries
Operating Principles
- Authority must be explicit.
- Accountability follows authority.
- AI may recommend authority but does not own accountability.
Failure Modes
- Decision paralysis
- Approval bottlenecks
- Conflicting ownership
- Unclear escalation
Metrics
- Decision latency
- Escalation rate
- Override frequency
- Accountability clarity
Business Outcomes
- Faster execution
- Better governance
- Greater organizational trust
Chapter 17
State Architecture
Capability Overview
State Architecture designs how work, objects, people, and AI transition through meaningful states over time.
Problem It Solves
Without explicit state, systems become inconsistent, workflows stall, and automation becomes unreliable.
Core Components
- States
- Transitions
- Triggers
- Events
- Ownership
- History
- Recovery
Operating Principles
- Every meaningful object has a state.
- State changes should be observable and intentional.
- Automation responds to state, not assumptions.
Business Outcomes
- Reliable automation
- Predictable workflows
- Better orchestration
- Improved resilience
Chapter 18
Feedback Architecture
Capability Overview
Feedback Architecture captures signals, evaluates outcomes, and feeds learning back into workflows, governance, and decision-making.
Problem It Solves
Without structured feedback, organizations repeat mistakes and AI systems fail to improve.
Core Components
- Signals
- Evaluation
- Metrics
- Learning loops
- Human feedback
- AI evaluation
- Continuous improvement
Operating Principles
- Every system should produce feedback.
- Feedback should change future behavior.
Business Outcomes
- Continuous learning
- Better decisions
- Better AI
- Better customer experiences
Chapter 19
Trust Architecture
Capability Overview
Trust Architecture intentionally designs the mechanisms that enable confidence between customers, employees, leaders, AI systems, and the organization.
Problem It Solves
Trust erodes when decisions are inconsistent, systems are opaque, accountability is unclear, or AI behaves unpredictably.
Inputs
- Governance
- Transparency
- Decision quality
- Security
- Communication
- Reliability
Core Components
- Transparency
- Explainability
- Accountability
- Consistency
- Reliability
- Human oversight
- Auditability
Operating Principles
- Trust is earned through consistent behavior.
- Transparency increases confidence.
- Explainability strengthens adoption.
- Trust should be designed, not assumed.
Failure Modes
- Opaque decisions
- Inconsistent experiences
- Automation without oversight
- Loss of customer confidence
Metrics
- Trust score
- Adoption rate
- Override frequency
- Customer confidence
- Employee confidence
Business Outcomes
- Higher adoption
- Stronger customer relationships
- Increased organizational confidence
- Sustainable AI deployment
Chapter 20
Context Architecture
Capability Overview
Context Architecture designs how relevant information is gathered, maintained, retrieved, shared, and applied across workflows and decisions.
Problem It Solves
Without context, people and AI rely on assumptions, producing inconsistent decisions and poor experiences.
Inputs
- User state
- Organizational state
- History
- Business rules
- Knowledge
- Environment
Core Components
- Memory
- Retrieval
- State
- Relationships
- Business rules
- Intent
- Personalization
Operating Principles
- Context is dynamic.
- Context should follow the work.
- Better context produces better decisions.
Failure Modes
- Lost history
- Fragmented knowledge
- Hallucinations
- Repeated questions
- Inconsistent recommendations
Metrics
- Context retrieval success
- Decision quality
- Personalization accuracy
- Task completion
Business Outcomes
- Better AI performance
- Better customer experiences
- Faster execution
- Better decisions
Chapter 21
Experience Architecture
Capability Overview
Experience Architecture integrates business strategy, workflows, decision architecture, governance, information, authority, state, context, trust, technology, and AI into a coherent system that consistently produces valuable experiences.
Problem It Solves
Organizations frequently optimize isolated touchpoints while overlooking the interconnected system that actually determines customer and business outcomes.
Core Components
- Business strategy
- Decision Architecture
- Workflow Architecture
- Governance Architecture
- Information Architecture
- Authority Architecture
- State Architecture
- Context Architecture
- Trust Architecture
- Human–AI Collaboration
- AI Systems Architecture
Operating Principles
- Experience is created by systems.
- Architecture precedes interfaces.
- Every interaction reflects the system behind it.
- Outcomes are the measure.
Failure Modes
- Siloed optimization
- Fragmented ownership
- Inconsistent experiences
- Low business value
Metrics
- Customer outcomes
- Business outcomes
- Cross-functional alignment
- Operational effectiveness
- Experience quality
Business Outcomes
- Better experiences
- Better decisions
- Better business outcomes
- Organizational resilience
- Sustainable competitive advantage