Founders build companies. Architects build companies that no longer depend on them.
Most founders never realise those are two different jobs.
The Architect's Principles is for the founder who has built something significant and is beginning to understand that growth alone is not the answer. The company still needs them for too much. Every important decision still routes through them. When they step back, things slow down or break.
This is not a leadership problem. It is an architecture problem.
Drawing on 25 years building and scaling organisations, including rebuilding his own agency after it became too dependent on him to function without his presence, Adam Stacey lays out 12 principles for founders who want to build companies that can communicate, decide, and operate without depending on them.
In an AI age, this question has never been more urgent. AI does not fix weak architecture. It amplifies it. A founder-dependent business plus AI is simply a faster version of the same problem.
The 12 principles cover the full arc of architectural leadership: how structure accumulates; how speed reveals weakness; how ownership creates judgement; how constraints create flow; why decisions are the real work; how the 2-6-2 model lets founders lead at the edges while AI handles the middle; and how legacy is designed, not inherited.
Whether you are building toward eight figures or already beyond it, the ceiling you are approaching is not a market ceiling or a talent ceiling.
It is a founder ceiling.
This book shows you how to build past it.