The right framework changes how you see the problem.
Mental models for thinking clearly, leading intentionally, and building what matters.
I didn't set out to create frameworks. I needed tools for my own thinking — ways to organize complexity and make decisions when the path wasn't clear. Over time, these models proved useful enough to share. Each one represents years of iteration, testing, and refinement.

Fulfillment Theory
Where clarity, collaboration, and connection intersect — the conditions for work that matters.
A diagnostic framework for leaders. When teams struggle, one of three elements is missing. Fulfillment Theory helps you find which one — and fix it.
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Elevation Framework
A prioritization lens: what to elevate, delegate, automate, or eliminate.
Most leaders are drowning in demands. This framework plots every activity on two axes — impact and integration — to reveal what actually deserves your attention.
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Spheres
Life in concentric circles — focus energy where you have leverage.
Five concentric circles from Me to World. The principle: you have most control at the center. Focus energy where you have genuine leverage.
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IDEAS Framework
A systematic approach to developing ideas from initial spark to shared insight.
Five stages — Identify, Develop, Explore, Assess, Share — that ensure good ideas don't die from neglect and help distinguish sparks worth pursuing.
Explore framework →How These Frameworks Connect
Each framework operates at a different scale. Fulfillment Theory looks outward — diagnosing what's missing when teams aren't thriving. The Elevation Framework looks inward — ruthlessly sorting your own work to focus on what only you can do. Spheres pulls even further back — deciding where to invest your finite energy across all of life's domains. And IDEAS is the meta-tool — a process for developing any insight into something worth sharing.
They don't chain together like steps. They're lenses you reach for depending on the problem in front of you. The best way to learn one is to apply it to a real situation — pick the lens that fits, work through it deliberately, and notice what it illuminates.
Questions about these frameworks?
If any of these resonate — or you're trying to figure out which one fits your situation — I'd love to hear from you.
