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Designed to Drift is a practitioner book about a pattern that appears repeatedly in large SAP and ERP transformations: programs losing control while everyone is still busy, governed, and reporting progress.
Most transformation failures do not begin with a dramatic collapse. They begin quietly. A decision stays open too long. An escalation comes back as another action item. A risk is logged but not resolved. The official plan remains intact, while working reality starts to move somewhere else. Teams keep working, dashboards keep updating, governance keeps meeting, and the program still appears to be under control.
Until it is not.
That pattern is program drift.
This book is written from inside the practical reality of large transformation delivery. It explains how control erodes before the damage becomes visible in schedule, budget, testing, cutover, or stabilization. Its central argument is simple: many transformations do not fail because people stop trying. They fail because work continues after the decisions needed to control it have not been made.
Designed to Drift examines the mechanics behind quiet failure, including:
This is not an academic book, and it is not a methodology manual. It does not argue for or against SAP Activate or any formal delivery framework. Instead, it looks underneath those frameworks at the human, structural, commercial, and governance conditions that determine whether they hold under pressure.
Designed to Drift is written for SAP transformation leaders, customer executives, delivery executives, PMO leaders, transformation assurance teams, advisory partners, and system integrator leaders who have seen programs remain busy and formally governed while quietly losing the ability to correct themselves.
The book gives leaders language for a pattern they may already recognize but struggle to name. More importantly, it shows where leverage still exists: how to detect drift earlier, reduce the decision surface, make escalation procedural rather than personal, separate reporting from control, and design governance so that truth can change direction before recovery becomes the only option.
Large transformations do not need more theater.
They need earlier truth, clearer decision rights, and control mechanisms that still work when pressure rises.
Designed to Drift is about seeing the loss of control before the metrics catch up.
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