
John Rossman and Andy Forti released a white paper that merges Geoffrey Moore’s Zone to Win framework with the Big Bet Leadership methodology, creating an integrated management system for corporate transformation. The paper argues that traditional execution models, built for predictability, fail in disruptive contexts such as AI, where 70‑90% of transformations flop. By pairing protected innovation zones with a risk‑forward operating system, the authors provide a practical playbook that aligns structure, metrics, and leadership commitment. The approach emphasizes a single, CEO‑led transformation bet at a time to avoid resource dilution.
Corporate transformation initiatives have long suffered from a mismatch between the tools used for incremental improvement and the demands of disruptive change. As AI and other digital forces reshape markets, executives find that the same execution‑centric management systems that drive quarterly results become liabilities. Studies show that up to nine out of ten large‑scale change programs miss their targets, often because they are judged by short‑term performance metrics rather than long‑term value creation. This gap creates a pressing need for a management approach that embraces uncertainty, rapid experimentation, and distinct governance structures.
The newly released white paper bridges this gap by marrying Geoffrey Moore’s Zone to Win architecture with the Big Bet Leadership operating system. Moore’s model partitions the enterprise into four zones—Performance, Productivity, Incubation, and Transformation—each with its own metrics, culture, and governance. The Incubation and Transformation zones act as protected sandboxes where disruptive bets can mature without being throttled by core‑business pressures. Big Bet Leadership injects a disciplined, risk‑forward process into these zones, using outcome‑driven memos and experiment planners to validate assumptions quickly and cheaply. This dual‑layered system ensures that visionary ideas receive both structural shelter and a pragmatic execution engine.
Practically, the integration materializes in the Zone Playbook, a tool that maps imperatives, OKRs, and workstreams across all zones and embeds them into the company’s regular operating cadence. By making trade‑offs explicit and requiring CEO‑level commitment to a single transformation bet, the playbook prevents silent erosion of resources and keeps focus on high‑impact initiatives. Organizations that adopt this framework can expect clearer visibility, faster learning cycles, and a higher probability of turning bold bets into sustainable new revenue streams, positioning them competitively in an increasingly volatile market.
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