Architect Tomorrow

Oliver Cronk

Architect Tomorrow is an independent, global network for enterprise, business and technology architects and tech-savvy leaders who believe architecture should actively shape a brighter future. Challenging hype, championing responsible innovation and holistic sustainability, and exploring how architecture and systems thinking can tackle the biggest challenges our organisations and society face. Independent by design. Honest, multidisciplinary and occasionally funny. Passionate about using architecture to make the world genuinely better, not just more automated? You're in the right place!

  1. Whatever Next? Making Transformation More Human with Lisa Woodall and Whynde Kuehn

    1D AGO

    Whatever Next? Making Transformation More Human with Lisa Woodall and Whynde Kuehn

    Oliver Cronk recorded a conversation at Chief Architect Network London 2026 with Lisa Woodall, Author of Whatever Next?, alongside Whynde Kuehn, Author of Strategy to Reality. Massive thanks to Grant Ecker and the CAN community for having us. In a conversation that came full circle, three years after we discussed Whynde's book with Lisa on the panel, the tables turned as Whynde joined to discuss Lisa's new book and the Five Lenses of Transformation.From Blog to BookLisa's journey to authorship grew from a decade of blogging, 156 posts, over 100,000 words:"I thought there is something in all this lived experience which I can bring together and maybe help everybody in the technology world of enterprise architecture think a bit differently, think about being more human and more honest. Because that was conversations I was hearing in the corridors but I wasn't hearing in the technical discussions."The Five Lenses of TransformationThe heart of the book is five lenses: Reflect, Reimagine, Reframe, Rewire and Reconnect. Lisa was emphatic these are not another framework:"It's not a framework. It's not a process. It's stepping back sometimes as architects. Stepping back from the technical diagrams, stepping back from the technical conversations and reflecting on why we are where we are."She identifies Rewire as the core lens but Reconnect as the most important: "Why are we doing all of this stuff? We're doing it for people."Whynde distilled it: "This book brings us back to two things: intent and human."Ecosystem Thinking Beyond the EnterpriseLisa connected transformation to the broader ecosystem: "It's not about designing for our organisation, it's about designing for the ecosystem that we sit within and being sure of the consequences not just for us but also for the organisations that are part of our supply chain. Because they're often thought of last."The 98/2 SplitOn AI investment, Lisa was characteristically direct: "1.5 trillion being spent on AI. How much is going into the technology side and how much is going into that human capability side? I would say it's probably 98% on the technology and 2% on the human side. I think we've got to correct that."Key TakeawaysStep back from the technical. The Five Lenses offer a way to see transformation differently, not as another framework but as a practice of honest reflection.Bring different people into the room. Behavioural researchers, business analysts and other disciplines belong in architecture discussions.Get out of the building. Observe what people actually experience. You will think about your challenges differently.Design for the ecosystem. The consequences of architectural decisions ripple through supply chains and communities. Those ecosystem stakeholders are often involved too late.Slow down to let humans catch up. With $1.5 trillion flowing into AI, architects have a role in rebalancing investment toward human capability.How change feels matters. Create authentic spaces for dialogue, not mechanical change management.Links and Resources:Whatever Next? book and Five Lenses: whatevernextbook.comStrategy to Reality: strategyintoreality.comS2E Transformation: s2etransformation.comBiz Arch Mastery: bizarchmastery.comCronk Advisory: cronkadvisory.comChief Architect Network: chiefarchitectnetwork.com

    31 min
  2. APR 8

    Governance Is Your Innovation Engine (If You're Doing It Right) with Grant Ecker

    In a world where architecture teams are either feared gatekeepers or invisible bystanders, Oliver brings together a brilliant panel to ask a genuinely awkward question: is your governance framework actually helping anyone?Joined by returning regular guests Selena Evans (attorney and certified business architect, USA) and Darryl Carr (enterprise architecture leader, Australia), plus Grant Ecker, founder of the Chief Architect Network and currently leading architecture at Ecolab; this conversation cuts through the mythology around governance to find what actually works, and why so many organisations are getting it badly wrong.What we cover:Governance has a reputation problem. It's been cast as the process of no, the place where careers go to stall and innovation goes to die. But as Selena puts it, that reputation belongs to bad governance; and bad governance is unfortunately abundant. Good governance, by contrast, is a learning function, a memory function, and ultimately an alignment mechanism that lets organisations move with confidence rather than chaos.Grant brings the Chief Architect Network's five themes into sharp focus: principles-based over rules-based; enablement not gatekeeping; AI governance and risk controls; a holistic operating model; and versioned reference architectures with a sustainable baseline. The key insight? Governance should be tailored to where the organisation actually needs agility and where it needs control; and those are rarely the same place.Darryl cuts to the chase on the purpose of governance: it's decision support. Not making decisions for people, but equipping the right people with the right information to make better ones. The moment governance forgets that, it becomes the obstacle rather than the enabler.Then there's AI. Does it fundamentally change the governance game, or is it just the latest technology that review boards need to interrogate carefully? The answer, as ever, is both. The basics remain the same; understand the value, understand the consequences, align to strategy. But AI introduces a probabilistic dimension that rules-based governance simply wasn't built for. When a system might take unpredicted action, you need to think in what Grant calls "3D chess": governing not just what the system does, but how it learns to think and act.The group also tackles something rarely discussed honestly: how generative AI might actually improve the governance process itself. From using AI as a sparring partner before an architecture review board, to automating boilerplate documentation so architects can focus on the decisions that matter, the tools that governance boards are scrutinising may also be the tools that make governance more effective.Darryl closes with a reminder that cuts through all the complexity: "Architecture isn't really about the architecture. It's about people, relationships, and communication." If AI can free up time for more of that, we're probably heading in the right direction.Key themes:Why bad governance abounds and what good governance actually looks likeGovernance as a learning and memory function, not a compliance checklistThe Chief Architect Network's five themes for effective architecture governanceHow AI changes the nature of governance — and what stays exactly the sameFeedback loops, and why closing them is harder than it soundsUsing AI to improve the governance process itselfThe case for "AI in the loop" rather than "human in the loop"Connect with our guests:Grant Ecker and the Chief Architect Network: chiefarchitectnetwork.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/grantecker/Selena Evans: https://linkedin.com/in/selenaevansDarryl Carr: https://www.linkedin.com/in/darrylcarr/Oliver Cronk: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cronky/

    49 min
  3. 12/04/2025

    Human centric AI architecture with Darryl Carr and Selena Evans

    In a world drowning in AI announcements and breathless proclamations about technological transformation, Oliver brought together Selena Evans (attorney and certified business architect based in the USA) and Darryl Carr (enterprise architecture leader based in Australia) for an honest conversation about technology adoption (of course majoring on AI and its promises), human-centred design, and the role of architects in shaping a more sustainable future. Oliver also talks a little about what he sees as the future of enterprise AI architecture / adoption which aligns with his other recent content.The conversation included:- AI bubble concerns and economic unsustainability- LLM limitations- Business case challenges- Data management issues- Governance and regulation- Human-centered design- Future scenarios and planning- Architectural grafting- Polarization and politics- Hope and principlesKey Takeaways:- Challenge the narrative - The economics of current AI investments don't add up. Ask hard questions about ROI and business cases before committing resources.- Understand the limitations - LLMs are excellent at pattern matching and decision support, but they break down with complexity and drift over time. They're not a replacement for human judgment in complex scenarios.- Fix the foundations first - Data quality, system integration, and organisational structure matter more than ever. AI amplifies what you have—for better or worse.- Think ecosystem, not just enterprise - Look beyond your organisational boundaries to understand market dynamics, partnerships, and how transformation will ripple through your industry.- Embrace governance as an enabler - Well-designed governance unlocks innovation rather than constraining it. Build it into the architecture from day one.- Practice architectural grafting - Build on existing foundations incrementally rather than attempting wholesale replacement. Society and organisations need time to digest change.- Keep humans central - No technology can replace the hard work of building shared meaning across disciplines and worldviews. This is where architects add irreplaceable value.- Define clear principles - Architects provide decision support by bringing holistic awareness to conversations. Establish and apply principles consistently.- Take a breath - The pressure to act immediately is real, but timing matters. Sometimes waiting for maturity is the right call.- Maintain hope through action - The situation is complex, but people across disciplines are coming together in new ways. Your work matters.

    57 min
  4. 05/30/2025

    Why Data Centres Belong in Nursing Homes (Not Isolated Warehouses) with David from Leafcloud

    In this episode, Oliver speaks with David Kohnstamm from Leafcloud about a fundamental shift in how we think about data centre locations. Forget remote warehouses - the future of sustainable computing lies in nursing homes, apartment complexes, and anywhere with constant heat demand.David reveals why traditional data centres waste enormous amounts of energy cooling servers, while distributed computing can turn that "waste" heat into free heating for communities. The key insight? It's all about matching your infrastructure to locations with 24/7 heat requirements.- Why nursing homes are perfect data centre locations (constant heat demand, 24/7 operations)- The fatal flaw with office-based edge computing (weekends, evenings, seasonal gaps)- How Leaf Cloud delivers servers that literally pay their rent with waste heat- Why PUE metrics actually reward throwing heat away- The difference between heat recovery that works vs. heat recovery that fails- Why hot water heating beats space heating for consistent demand- How distributed computing can scale to meet 50% of residential heating needsThe Bottom Line: Location strategy for data centres should follow heat demand patterns, not just connectivity or land costs. When you place servers where constant heat is needed, you solve both sustainability and cost challenges simultaneously.#SustainableTech #DataCentres #GreenComputing #HeatRecovery #DistributedComputing

    29 min
  5. 05/26/2025

    Using waste heat from data centres: Deep Green - Mark Bjornsgaard

    Please note: We apologise for the audio and video quality in this episode - as Oliver mentions, "we're a bit hesitant here because we're kind of squatting in part of Tech Show London trying to record a conversation" - but we couldn't miss the opportunity to capture this discussion!In this episode of Architect Tomorrow, we catch up with Mark from Deep Green at Tech Show London to discuss their groundbreaking approach to data centre sustainability.Deep Green operates data centres with a crucial difference - they capture all the waste heat from computing and provide it free to industry and district heating systems. As Mark explains: "97% of the electrons that go into a computer come out as heat" - turning data centres into efficient electric heaters that serve dual purposes.Key topics covered:- How heat recovery makes data centres 20% cheaper to cool and operate- The role of AI and high-density computing in creating more waste heat- Why this model becomes economically attractive above 20kW per rack- The potential to heat 80% of the UK through district heating systems- The intersection of climate emergency and digital infrastructureMark shares insights on market adoption, explaining: "we're unfathomably cheap if you do this you just make yourself richer" and discusses how sustainability credentials combined with superior economics are driving customer interest.This conversation offers a fascinating perspective on how the AI revolution's power demands could actually accelerate decarbonisation efforts across Europe. 🔗 Learn more: https://deepgreen.energy🎯 Part of our ongoing series on sustainable technology and digital transformation#SustainableTech #DataCentres #GreenIT #AI #DistrictHeating #Sustainability #ArchitectTomorrow

    10 min

About

Architect Tomorrow is an independent, global network for enterprise, business and technology architects and tech-savvy leaders who believe architecture should actively shape a brighter future. Challenging hype, championing responsible innovation and holistic sustainability, and exploring how architecture and systems thinking can tackle the biggest challenges our organisations and society face. Independent by design. Honest, multidisciplinary and occasionally funny. Passionate about using architecture to make the world genuinely better, not just more automated? You're in the right place!