THARP Strategic
Synthesis (Current State)
Generated: 2026-03-04 (America/Denver) Owner: Patrick Smith
1) Where We Actually Are
THARP is not blocked by lack of effort. THARP is blocked by fragile
handoffs.
The same pattern shows up in design, estimating, and production
scheduling:
- Core systems are in place.
- Critical automation is incomplete or unreliable.
- Humans do the bridge work manually.
- That manual bridge becomes the real operating system.
This is why the organization feels busy but still exposed.
2) What Is Confirmed
From integrated calls and operating artifacts, these are the
confirmed conditions:
- Designers are manually bridging CV outputs into WIAT/Sightline
estimate workflows.
- Complexity increases transfer time and error risk.
- Scheduling truth is partially maintained outside trusted ERP date
fields.
- A small number of operators carry critical continuity risk.
- Existing process works, but it is labor-heavy and brittle.
3) What Matters Strategically
This is not a "replace everything" moment. This is a sequencing
moment.
The strategic mistake would be broad platform ambition before proving
one hard boundary fix.
The strategic move is:
- Fix one high-frequency handoff.
- Prove time saved + error reduction quickly.
- Expand only after trust and measurable ROI are real.
4) Build Order That Fits
Reality
Build 1 (Default)
CV -> WIAT/Sightline estimate sync +
validation
Why first:
- Highest repeated pain
- Clear integration surface
- Measurable inside 30 days
- Direct user pull from teams doing the work
Build 2
Production backlog autopilot + exception
visibility
Why second:
- High value
- Depends on tighter field trust and exception semantics
- Better launched after Build 1 credibility is established
5) Current Strategic Position
If we execute this narrowly, we can convert discovery into a
defendable operating win.
If we over-scope, we burn cycle time and lose the window.
The right posture right now:
- narrow first wedge
- high implementation discipline
- explicit acceptance criteria
- hard measurement from day one
6) Risk Register (Current)
- Scope drift risk: trying to solve multiple
boundaries at once.
- Trust risk: mapped writes without clear validation
and rollback controls.
- Ownership risk: no named adoption owner on the
operator side.
- Data-quality risk: edge-case variability not
captured in initial mapping rules.
- Narrative risk: strategy language outrunning
execution evidence.
7) What Tomorrow Must Produce
Tomorrow’s PM call should end with these concrete outputs:
- A locked Build 1 acceptance definition.
- Named owners for data, adoption, and validation.
- Explicit trusted vs untrusted status fields.
- Baseline metrics for time, error, and exception rate.
- Immediate post-call artifact and timeline commitments.
If those are not locked, we should not pretend we are in
execution.
8) Plain Current-State Bottom
Line
The opportunity is real. The pain is real. The wedge is clear. The
only question is execution quality over the next 30 days.
That is where we are today.