Your work keeps losing ground.
Effort alone won’t fix it.
Context erodes. Decisions get revisited. Progress doesn’t carry forward.
These tools are built for that problem.
For senior contributors and team leaders in distributed and hybrid teams.
What You Get
Share your email, and you get immediate access to the full Work Library, plus Work Notes, a periodic letter with patterns and practices drawn from real distributed teams.
If decisions keep getting rehashed
A guide and template that records what was decided, what was considered, and what conditions would justify revisiting — so the conversation stays closed.
If your team keeps losing track of what changed
A structured update template that reports movement toward an outcome, not a list of activities. Leaders can read it in two minutes and know exactly where things stand.
If plans break down mid-stream
A discussion guide for the moment when discovered effort changes what’s possible, so your team makes an explicit choice instead of absorbing the cost invisibly.
If your progress isn’t being seen
Tools for making work observable by design: not by communicating more, but by structuring what you produce so it can be understood without explanation.
If good ideas disappear after meetings
Worksheets for capturing a decision, clarifying a request, and getting a half-formed idea out of your head and into a form that can move.
Work Notes
A periodic letter: not a newsletter in the usual sense. Each issue covers one pattern: why it happens in distributed teams, what it costs, and what a practical response looks like. Written from years of watching capable people work harder than they should have to.
Amy is one of those rare leaders who truly listens (like really listens) and sees people clearly. Her ability to observe thoughtfully and guide with both wisdom and empathy had a profound impact on my growth as a product leader.
Sam Harris, (remote) Senior Product Manager, Jamboree
If you want to explore first
Watch: short videos on preserving progress and leading distributed work
Read: weekly articles on making work matter across time and distance
Follow: ongoing ideas and discussion on distributed work