THE POST-PROJECT WORLD PODCAST SERIES

Luigi Rondanini

What happens when AI makes project management obsolete? Luigi Rondanini explores the hidden "coordination tax" consuming up to 40% of project budgets—and how companies like Netflix, Spotify, and Tesla already operate without traditional project managers. Introducing OrbaOS: an organisational operating system where AI handles coordination and humans focus on meaning, ethics, and strategy. For project professionals, leaders, and anyone curious about work's evolution.

  1. The Governance Shift: Three Books on Coordination Capital (Special Announcement)

    4월 10일

    The Governance Shift: Three Books on Coordination Capital (Special Announcement)

    Three interconnected publications are coming that reshape how institutional leaders measure, govern, and manage organizational structure. The Coordination Capital Doctrine (July 7, 2026) is a governance specification establishing measurement, structural floor derivation, and board-level interpretation of coordination capital—the material share of organizational cost consumed by coordination activity. Forty-six thousand words. Hardcover. For CFOs, audit committees, and boards of regulated financial institutions. The Coordination Capital Compendium (May 2027) operationalizes the Doctrine. Forty-seven thousand words across fourteen chapters. Shows how to implement coordination capital measurement at scale using AI-assisted infrastructure while maintaining human governance authority. For CFOs, governance teams, and audit committee chairs beginning implementation. The Post-Project World: A Book (End of 2026) is the narrative companion to the Doctrine. Written for COOs, CIOs, and transformation leaders. Explains why project-based organizational models are breaking down, what structures emerge to replace them, and how to lead through continuous adaptation instead of discrete delivery cycles. Together, these three books form a complete institutional offering: the Doctrine establishes specification, the Compendium operationalizes it, and The Post-Project World book makes it intelligible to broader organizational leadership. Key Concepts Explained: Coordination Capital = the organizational burden created by synchronizing, approving, reporting on, and managing dependencies across your operation. In most mid-market institutions, coordination capital represents 18–35% of total labor allocation. Coordination Capital Ratio (CCR) = coordination capital ÷ total organizational cost. A single number telling you whether your governance structure is proportionate or drifting. Structural Floor = the minimum coordination capital your institution cannot reduce without violating regulatory requirements, breaking risk governance, or abandoning governance structures required by law. Coordination Drift = change in CCR over time. The moment when governance structures move from necessary to bloated. Who This Matters For: Institutions operating under intensive regulatory oversight where coordination infrastructure has become materially costly. Organizations where committee proliferation, reporting redundancy, and decision-making inefficiency have escaped active governance. Boards and audit committees asking whether their governance burden is sustainable. On This Episode: Luigi Rondanini walks through all three publications, their audiences, their relationship to one another, and why the timing matters now. He covers the £40M+ coordination drift example that shows why this measurement is not theoretical. And he explains what happens when institutions measure and govern coordination capital actively—they operate with structural advantages that competitors cannot easily replicate. The Doctrine is available now for pre-order on Waterstones, Foyles, and all major UK booksellers. Street date July 7, 2026.

    15분
  2. 2월 23일

    The Tipping Point: Why Everything Changes Now

    We've seen the evidence. Netflix, Spotify, Haier, GitHub, Tesla and SpaceX—all operating without traditional project managers. We've traced the history from craft guilds to algorithms. We've examined why even Agile isn't sufficient. Now the question: why does this matter now? Why is this moment different from every previous wave of automation hype? Because we're at a tipping point. Multiple forces are converging that make the transition from human coordination to algorithmic coordination inevitable and imminent. In this episode, I explore:→ The AI capability threshold: when machines cross from assistance to autonomy→ The economic pressure: why coordination overhead is no longer sustainable→ The generational shift: new workers who expect different organizational models→ The remote work catalyst: how distributed teams accelerated the need for digital-first coordination→ The network effects: why each organization that transitions makes it easier for the next→ The point of no return: when staying traditional becomes riskier than transforming Transitions don't happen gradually. They tip. For decades, traditional project management was the safe choice. That calculus is reversing. Soon, the risky choice will be staying with human coordination while competitors automate it. This episode closes Season One. We've built the case. The coordination tax is real. The evidence exists. The historical pattern is clear. The forces are converging. Season Two begins the solution: the OrbaOS methodology, the new roles, the practices that make autonomous coordination viable. The tipping point is now. The only question is which side of it you'll be on. 🎧 Available now on Spotify and all major platforms.

    15분
  3. 2월 2일 ·  보너스

    Five Organizations, One Direction: Patterns of the Post-Project World

    Several listeners asked for a recap episode that ties together everything we learned from the case studies. This bonus episode is my response to that request. We've examined five radically different organizations—Netflix, Spotify, Haier, GitHub, and Tesla/SpaceX. Different industries. Different cultures. Different approaches. But they all point in the same direction. In this special recap episode, I synthesize what we've learned from each organization and identify the five common patterns that enable coordination without coordinators: → Autonomous units: Stable, empowered teams rather than temporary projects→ Transparent information: Widely shared data that eliminates the need for status intermediaries→ Clear context: Shared understanding of purpose that enables aligned decisions→ Platform-enabled coordination: Technology handling routine coordination tasks→ Trust: Organizations trusting people to make good decisions with proper accountability These aren't nice-to-have cultural attributes. They're architectural choices—decisions about how to structure work, information, decision-making, and human relationships. If you've been following along and want a consolidated view before moving into Season 2, this episode is for you. And if you're just discovering the podcast, this recap will bring you up to speed on the evidence that traditional project management is already being replaced. Thanks to everyone who requested this. Your feedback shapes the show. 🎧 Available now on Spotify and all major platforms.

    13분
  4. Tesla and SpaceX: When Mission Becomes the Coordination Mechanism

    1월 26일

    Tesla and SpaceX: When Mission Becomes the Coordination Mechanism

    Elon Musk runs multiple complex organisations with significantly fewer middle managers than traditional competitors. Love him or hate him, there's something worth understanding here. SpaceX builds rockets with a fraction of the management overhead that NASA contractors require. Tesla scaled faster than any automotive company in history with an organisational structure that defies conventional wisdom. How do they coordinate without the usual layers of management? In this episode, I explore how mission-driven alignment can replace hierarchical coordination. When everyone understands the goal with crystal clarity—put humans on Mars, accelerate sustainable energy—you need less management overhead to keep people moving in the same direction. I examine:→ Why clarity of mission reduces coordination costs→ The first principles thinking that eliminates unnecessary process→ Flat hierarchies and direct communication across levels→ The "work wherever you're needed" culture that replaces rigid role boundaries→ The very real human costs of this approach—and why it's not a model to copy blindly→ What traditional organisations can learn without adopting the extremes Mission as coordination mechanism isn't about working people to exhaustion. It's about alignment so strong that coordination becomes almost automatic. The question for your organisation: is your mission clear enough to coordinate? 🎧 Available now on Spotify and all major platforms.

    16분

소개

What happens when AI makes project management obsolete? Luigi Rondanini explores the hidden "coordination tax" consuming up to 40% of project budgets—and how companies like Netflix, Spotify, and Tesla already operate without traditional project managers. Introducing OrbaOS: an organisational operating system where AI handles coordination and humans focus on meaning, ethics, and strategy. For project professionals, leaders, and anyone curious about work's evolution.