Innovation Dossier · v15.0 Santa Monica, CA Updated 2026

On the Architecture of the Intelligence Economy

Abstract A fifteen-year study at the intersection of frontier AI research and enterprise value. The author, a researcher, founder, operator, and advisor to Fortune 500 C-suites, finds that durable advantage emerges only when deep technical authorship meets commercial command: 11 patents, 20+ peer-reviewed publications, contributions to 2 books, and $300M+ in strategic deals closed for the likes of Boeing, Disney and Hewlett-Packard. Findings generalize across nine industries. Meetings were harmed in the making of these results.
fig. 1 · live inference graph · drag to rotate ▮ rendering
Table 1 · Key Results (2011 → Present)n = 15 yrs · peer-reviewed
$0
Strategic deals
closed
0
Patents
granted
0
IEEE & Scopus
publications
0
Books
contributed
0
International
AI awards
0
Industries
transformed
Note. Deal value reported in aggregate. Results significant at the board level (p < .01). Replication attempts welcome, see §18.
Table 1.1 · Selected measures, continuous
Strategic value closed $300M+ ▲ aggregate Patents granted 11 Peer-reviewed publications 20+ Books contributed 2 International AI awards Industries transformed 9 Countries led across 7 Years at the frontier 15+ LLMs in production since pre-ChatGPT Recurring meetings created 0 ▼ by design Decks required to start 0
§ 02 · System Documentation

Model card: AJ-1

Arjun Jaggi
Fig. 2 · The author. Trusted by CEOs, CIOs, CTOs & CISOs across Fortune 100 enterprises and high-growth startups.
aj-1 · model-card.md
model_familyfrontier executive · researcher-operator hybrid
target_deploymentAI, Innovation & Growth leadership
initial_release2011 · founder, MapleGraph Solutions
training_corpus9 industries · 7 countries · Fortune 100 → startups
parameters15+ yrs · 11 patents · 20+ publications · 2 books
modalitiesresearch ↔ architecture ↔ GTM ↔ boardroom
context_windowsilicon to board agenda, lossless
capabilitiesagentic AI · frontier reasoning · compound AI systems · RAG · cybersecurity · decision intelligence
alignmentP&L outcomes · empathy-first leadership · trust by design
deploymentproduction since pre-ChatGPT era
deployed_forBoeing · Disney · HP · Novartis · ExxonMobil · US Army · Airbus
Known limitations: will not present a pilot as a strategy. Refuses to ship hype without an architecture. Allergic to recurring meetings with no agenda. Hallucination rate on market foresight: anomalously low. Claims are grounded in peer-reviewed research.
§ 03 · How I Think

Bring me a hard problem. Watch the read.

Anyone can list credentials. Fewer can show you how they actually reason. Pick a question a CEO would bring me, and watch the diagnosis assemble in real time, the same first-principles read I'd give in the room. Choose one.

reasoning_engine · idle
Select a question on the left. The diagnosis writes itself, step by step.
§ 04 · Architecture

Fluent at every layer.

Most careers cover two layers of this stack. Most "AI strategists" cover one: the slide layer, which is not pictured because it is not load-bearing. I've shipped, sold, secured or governed all eight. Move your cursor over the tower. It notices.

L1Trust & Security
L2Compute & Infrastructure
L3Data & Knowledge
L4Models & Reasoning
L5Agents & Orchestration
L6Applications & Experience
L7Growth & GTM
L8Board & Governance
Fig. 3 · The full stack

Eight layers. One person.

From data center floors to board agendas. Hover (or tap) a layer; every one of these comes with shipped systems, closed contracts, or published research behind it. Strategy that hasn't touched the stack is just a vibe.

value flows up  ·  trust flows down  ·  slideware found at no layer
§ 05 · Reference Architecture

A compound AI system, drawn live.

Everyone says "agentic." Few can draw it. This is the reference architecture I design for enterprises: a governed, multi-agent system where reasoning, tools, memory and guardrails compose into something that ships. Watch a request flow through it, or hover any node to inspect.

compound-ai-system · reference-architecture.svg
user request routerintent · policy orchestratorreasoning loop agent Aretrieval agent Bactions memory + RAGvector · graph tools / APIs guardrailseval · governance grounded outputto the P&L
orchestrator · the reasoning loop that plans, calls agents, and decides when the work is done. ▶ replay request flow
Fig. 4 · Reference architecture for a governed compound AI system. Note the guardrail layer sitting on the output path, not bolted on after. That placement is the difference between a demo and a deployment.
§ 06 · Method

The training run: 2011 → present

Capability follows compute, and careers follow compounding reps. Fifteen years of scale: pretraining as a founder, fine-tuning inside global enterprises, an alignment phase in security, and deployment at the frontier, including production LLM systems years before the world learned the acronym.

10⁰ 10¹ 10² 10³ 10⁴ 2011 2014 2017 2020 2023 2026 CAPABILITY (LOG) founder IBM · global accounts security · F500 CISOs LLMs in production (pre-ChatGPT) Gen-AI portfolio Chief AI seat → F500 advisory
Fig. 5 · Career scaling curve. Capability compounds with cross-domain reps; no plateau observed. Compare Kaplan et al. (2020): careers, it turns out, obey scaling laws too.
Phase 01

Pretraining

2011 → 2013

Founded an automation company in New Delhi. Raw exposure to how products get built, sold, and scaled. The base weights for everything after.

Phase 02

Scaling

2013 → 2017

IBM and HCLTech at global scale: marquee accounts, 250-system modernizations, and how the world's largest enterprises actually decide.

Phase 03

Alignment

2017 → 2019

Security years: NextLabs and Awake. Boeing, Disney, Novartis, the US Army. Trust, governance, and AI/ML-powered defense. Alignment before it was a buzzword.

Phase 04

Deployment

2019 → 2022

Frontier portfolios for HP; then production LLMs at Systran for federal and Fortune 100 clients, years before mainstream adoption.

Phase 05

Frontier

2023 → Now

Executive command: Gen-AI portfolio leadership, the AI, Innovation & Growth seat, and Fortune 500 AI-strategy advisory at Cognizant.

ckpt-2011

Ideapreneur

MapleGraph Solutions · New Delhi

Founded and led automation innovation across e-commerce, restaurant and automotive sectors. Entrepreneurial base weights.

ckpt-2013

Service Line Leader

IBM · United States

Led consulting teams across Whirlpool, Philip Morris, Pearson and more, translating complex requirements into delivered systems.

ckpt-2015

Solutions Architect

HCLTech · South Africa

Enterprise-scale data center modernization across 250 systems. Won against four global competitors. Yes, the infrastructure layer. Personally.

ckpt-2017

Enterprise Security Leadership

NextLabs · Awake Security · Silicon Valley

Global presales and AI/ML-powered security for Boeing, Disney, ExxonMobil, Novartis, the US Army and Fortune 500 CISOs. Completed an MS in Engineering Management at National University, San Diego. Sleep was a known limitation.

ckpt-2019

Technology Solutions Leader

Quest Global · Hewlett-Packard Account

Owned AI, deep learning, robotics, blockchain, AR and cybersecurity for one of the world's largest enterprise accounts.

ckpt-2020

Sales, Solutioning & Customer Success

Systran · San Diego

Pioneered enterprise LLM and neural MT adoption across federal, healthcare and Fortune 100 clients. 45+ projects across 7 countries, pre-ChatGPT.

ckpt-2023

Sr. Director, Client Partner

HCLTech · San Diego

Scaled an enterprise portfolio across hi-tech, healthcare and financial services. Gen-AI, analytics and cybersecurity through C-level governance.

ckpt-2025a

Chief AI & Growth Officer

Brightcone.ai · Santa Monica

Architected enterprise AI strategy on LLMs, RAG and agentic AI. Teams, IP pipeline and partnerships for a differentiated market position.

ckpt-2025b

AI Strategy, Enterprise Intelligence & Growthrunning

Cognizant · Santa Monica

Trusted growth partner to Fortune 500 C-suites: multi-year AI transformation roadmaps, agentic systems and decision intelligence frameworks across a major West Coast portfolio.

§ 07 · Incident Log

Known failure modes of the enterprise.

Fifteen years of field observation across nine industries. These incidents reproduce reliably in any sufficiently large organization. None of them are technology problems. All of them are why "AI transformations" fail. Each ships with a patch that's worked in production.

MEETING_LOOP_DETECTEDsev-1 · chronic

The same alignment meeting, recursively scheduled since FY22. Identical points raised by identical people. State change: none. Calendar utilization: 100%. Alignment achieved: see Fig. 6.

patch: decisions get owners and dates in the room, or the meeting returns a non-zero exit code and doesn't recur.
APPROVAL_STALLEDsev-1

Request entered the governance queue 14 months ago. Last seen awaiting a committee that awaits a steering group that awaits budget season. The market, regrettably, did not also wait.

patch: decision rights mapped to the stack, not the org chart. Approval latency is a competitive metric. I report it to the board.
PILOT_PURGATORYsev-2

POC #47 of the same chatbot use case. Each pilot "successful." None in production. Innovation budget fully consumed by demonstrations of things everyone already believed possible in 2023.

patch: no pilot without a production path, an owner, and a P&L line it will move. Pilots are experiments, not aquariums.
STRATEGY_AS_SLIDEWAREsev-2

A 90-slide AI strategy, beautifully designed, extensively socialized, unanimously approved. Systems shipped as a result: zero. The deck has since been updated to a darker template.

patch: strategy written as architecture + sequencing + owners. If it can't be drawn on the stack (§03), it isn't a strategy.
BUZZWORD_OVERFLOWsev-3

"We're an AI-first company." Inspection of the stack reveals: no data pipeline, no model in production, one vendor demo, and a press release. The word "agentic" used 31 times in one town hall.

patch: vocabulary earned by deployment. I translate buzzwords into architecture in real time. Politely. In front of the board.
INNOVATION_THEATERsev-3

Hackathon photos posted within the hour. Repository last touched: the hackathon. The lab has beanbags, a neon sign, and no path to production. Morale rose; nothing else did.

patch: innovation wired to revenue and research, not to the events calendar. Compounding beats theater every quarter after the first.
Q1Q2Q3Q4 Q5Q6Q7Q8 alignment meetings held alignment achieved (n ≈ 0, remarkably stable)
Fig. 6 · Longitudinal study, anonymized enterprise. Meeting volume scales linearly; decisions remain flat. This is the only flat line in the industry nobody is trying to disrupt.
§ 08 · First Principles · The Inner Stack

The part of the architecture nobody audits.

"The intelligence economy is not a gold rush. It is a consciousness shift. Companies chasing money will crash. Companies chasing research, with empathy in the architecture, will lead the market."field notes · repeated to boards until it compounds

t₀ t→∞ MARKET POSITION peak hype · keynote confetti post-hype correction category leadership (compounding) research-first (observed) - - money-first (observed)
Fig. 7 · The crash curve, observed across 15 years and nine industries. Money is a lagging indicator of research. Extraction decays; curiosity compounds. n = every hype cycle since 2011.
principle 01

Research over revenue theater

Revenue is the exhaust of research, not the engine. Optimize the quarter and you get the quarter. Optimize understanding and you get the decade. The quarters come included.

principle 02

Empathy is infrastructure

The highest-bandwidth protocol in any organization is a leader who actually listens. Teams ship what cultures permit. Every failed transformation I've audited failed at this layer first.

principle 03

Presence over performance

Stillness is a technical skill. Knowing yourself is a prerequisite to scaling intelligence. You cannot align a system if you've never sat with your own. The inner stack ships first.

principle 04

Embrace the era

This shift rewards the open-handed. Those who embrace it, with curiosity, humility and rigor, will define the next era. Those who resist will eventually be briefed about it. By consultants.

§ 09 · Live Model

The thesis, as a simulator.

Don't take the crash curve on faith. Drive it. Adjust how much an organization invests in research versus optics, set the time horizon, and watch the two strategies diverge in real time. The math is not subtle.

0 now horizon
research-first outcome··
money-first outcome··
verdict··
Fig. 9 · Toy model, real dynamic. Money-first spikes on hype then mean-reverts; research-first compounds and only crosses late. The crossover point is where careers, and companies, are made.
§ 10 · Diagnostic

How AI-ready is your organization?

Four questions. Thirty seconds. An honest read on where your organization actually sits, and what the highest-leverage next move is. No email gate. The same first-pass I run in a discovery call.

readiness_diagnostic.run
§ 11 · Interoperability

Compatibility matrix: AJ-1 × the C-suite.

This profile is architected for one kind of mandate: AI, Innovation & Growth at the leadership table. The remit only works if every seat gets a native interface. Tested against all known executive protocols. No adapters required.

× CEO

A market narrative and a roadmap that survive contact with reality. Board-ready foresight without the hype premium.

compat: 100% · native
× CFO

ROI discipline. No science projects without a business case, no business case without an architecture. Refreshing, reportedly.

compat: 100% · native
× CTO

Speaks architecture natively. Has modernized 250 systems, shipped LLMs pre-ChatGPT, and will absolutely read the diagram.

compat: 100% · native
× CIO

Integration over rip-and-replace. Governance that enables instead of strangles. ERP scars acquired honestly, at scale.

compat: 100% · native
× CISO

Security-first DNA from defense-grade deployments: Boeing, the US Army, Fortune 500 SOCs. Finally, an AI strategy that gets it.

compat: 100% · native
× CMO

Brand, GTM and category design. AI capability made legible to markets. Knows how brands compound, not just how they launch.

compat: 100% · native
× CHRO

Talent strategy and cultures of innovation built across 7 countries. Empathy treated as infrastructure, not as a poster.

compat: 100% · native
× Board / VC

Risk framed honestly, foresight grounded in published research, diligence that reads the code and the cap table. Sleep restored.

compat: 100% · native
Table 2. Interoperability verified in production boardrooms. The one known incompatibility: executives who wanted to be told the deck was enough.
§ 12 · Generated On Demand

Your executive brief, written live.

Pick who's reading. The brief rewrites itself for that audience in real time, the same way I tailor the first five minutes of any room. Choose a seat and watch it type.

Reader
brief_ceo.md · generated
§ 13 · Interactive Session

Query the author.

Documentation is fine. Inference is better. This dossier ships with a live CLI. Ask it anything a diligence team would. Try a command, or just click one.

guest@jaggi-lab · zsh
guest@jaggi-lab %
§ 14 · Evaluations

AJ-Bench (held-out, real-world)

BenchmarkScoreResult
BoardRoom-QAexplaining frontier AI to non-technical boards
97.4
GTM-Benchgo-to-market & portfolio strategy, 9 industries
95.1
Frontier-Foresightcalling LLMs before the world did (2020)
99.2
Trust-Evalsecurity & governance under Fortune 500 CISO scrutiny
96.3
Theater-Detectionspotting innovation theater at forty paces
99.8
Hype-Resistancerefusing to ship slideware as strategy
100
Table 3. An illustrative, self-styled benchmark, scored with conviction and a wink. The underlying record (patents, publications, deals) is real and verifiable; see §18.
§ 15 · Value Mapping

How capability becomes outcome.

A profile is a list. A system is a map. This traces how the raw capabilities on the left compose into the business outcomes on the right. Hover any node to isolate its paths. Notice that nothing terminates in a slide.

tip: hover a capability or an outcome to trace what feeds what. Every path ends in revenue, trust, or research, never in theater.
§ 16 · Capability Surface

The full capability surface.

Fig. 10 · Self-assessed capability surface across eight axes, the rare profile that is strong on every one rather than spiked on a single specialty. Breadth is the moat.
§ 17 · Field Notes

Writing from the frontier.

Updated this month

Short, opinionated takes on what the industry is actually talking about right now, minus the press-release gloss. Each piece is grounded in primary reporting, charted, and links to its sources. Click any piece to read it.

In conversation with GartnerEYIBMGoogle CloudMicrosoft AIDatabricksInfoWorld
Agentic AIJun 2026 · 4 min

Pilot Purgatory Is a Governance Problem, Not a Model Problem

Gartner says 40% of enterprise apps will embed agents by year-end, up from under 5%. Most of those projects will still die in pilot. The reason isn't the model. It's that nobody put guardrails, owners and a P&L line on the output path.

agenticgovernanceproduction
read note →field note 01
Enterprise ValueJun 2026 · 3 min

The 75% That's Trapped in Your Silos

The headline number this month: up to three-quarters of AI value stays stuck because organizations optimize functions, not flows. Orchestration, not more automation, is the unlock.

orchestrationvalue flows
read note →field note 02
World ModelsJun 2026 · 3 min

Why World Models Are the Real Next Frontier

Pattern recognition plateaus on more compute and more data. The next leap is systems that model how the world actually works, causal, physical, social, and the enterprises that prepare for it now will not be caught flat.

world modelsreasoning
read note →field note 03
ComputeJun 2026 · 3 min

A Trillion-Fold Ramp, and What It Means for Your Roadmap

Training compute has grown a trillion-fold, with another thousand-fold expected in three years. "Superintelligence labs" are now a category. Strategy built for today's model sizes is already obsolete.

scalinginfrastructure
read note →field note 04
StrategyJun 2026 · 4 min

The Frontier Just Fractured Into Four

There is no single frontier anymore: regulatory, efficiency, cost and capability are now separate races. Picking the right one for your use case is the new core competency. Hype picks all four and wins none.

frontier modelscostregulation
read note →field note 05
Context EngineeringJun 2026 · 4 min

Prompt Engineering Is Dead. Context Engineering Is the Job Now.

The model is no longer the bottleneck. What you put around it is. Context engineering - designing what the model knows, when it knows it, and how it forgets - is the discipline separating teams shipping value from teams iterating on demos.

context engineeringRAGsystem design
read note →field note 06
MCPJun 2026 · 3 min

MCP Is the USB-C Moment for Enterprise AI. Most IT Teams Are Not Ready.

Anthropic's Model Context Protocol is becoming the de facto standard for connecting AI agents to tools, data, and APIs. The land grab is already underway. Vendors who own the MCP server own the integration layer - and the margin that comes with it.

MCPagenticintegration
read note →field note 07
Vibe CodingJun 2026 · 3 min

Vibe Coding Is Not the Threat to Engineering Teams. The Backlog It Creates Is.

AI-generated code ships faster than it can be reviewed, tested, or secured. The velocity is real. So is the debt. Enterprises adopting vibe coding without a governance wrapper are building a liability that will arrive in the form of a breach, not a sprint retrospective.

vibe codingAI devsecurity
read note →field note 08
Reasoning ModelsJun 2026 · 4 min

Your Organization Does Not Need a Reasoning Model. It Needs to Know When Not to Use One.

o3, Gemini 2.5 Pro, Claude Opus 4 - the reasoning tier is powerful and expensive. Most enterprise use cases do not need it. The real skill in 2026 is model routing: matching task complexity to model capability without paying frontier prices for commodity work.

reasoning modelsmodel routingcost
read note →field note 09
AI ROIJun 2026 · 4 min

The CFO Will Ask for the AI ROI Number. You Should Have It Before They Do.

Boards are done funding AI on faith. The new pressure is proof: cost per outcome, not cost per token. Enterprises without an AI measurement layer are one budget cycle away from a hard conversation. The ones with it are compounding advantage while everyone else recalibrates.

AI ROIfinancemeasurement
read note →field note 10
Note. Perspective pieces, the author's own views on live industry themes, written deliberately ahead of the consensus. That is the job. Follow along via LinkedIn.
§ 17b · Deep Analysis

Long reads for people who make decisions.

Primary-source analysis, SVG-charted data, and actionable frameworks. Written for C-suite leaders who are past the hype and need to act. Each piece takes 15 minutes to read and is designed to change how you think about one thing.

8-12×
cheaper inference vs closed frontier APIs
For: CTOs · CFOs · AI Procurement Leaders
Open Source Models Closed the Gap. What That Means for Vendor Lock-In.
DeepSeek-V3 trained for $5.6M and matched GPT-4o on most enterprise benchmarks. Inference costs run 8-12× lower than closed APIs. The era of mandatory frontier-model lock-in is over — and the routing decision is now a CFO conversation as much as a CTO one.
13 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  AI Strategy
Read →
2031
Earliest credible year for cryptography-breaking quantum
For: CISOs · Boards · General Counsel · Regulated Industry CTOs
Quantum Is Not a Compute Problem. It Is a Cryptography Problem.
Nation-states are harvesting your encrypted data today to decrypt it when quantum computers arrive. NIST finalized post-quantum standards in 2024. The migration takes 5-7 years. Most enterprises have not started. The window is narrowing.
14 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Security Strategy
Read →
46%
of GitHub code AI-generated · 40% rise in AI-pattern vulnerabilities
For: CTOs · CISOs · Engineering Leaders
Vibe Coding Is Not a Developer Problem. It Is a CTO Problem.
AI writes nearly half the code on GitHub. Developers ship 55% faster on greenfield tasks. And security teams are logging a 40% rise in AI-generated vulnerability patterns. The productivity gains are real. So is the technical debt accumulating at 3x speed underneath them.
13 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Engineering Strategy
Read →
92%
Fortune 500 with ethics policy · 15% with live enforcement
For: Chief Risk Officers · General Counsel · Board Audit Committees
AI Governance Theater: What Enterprise AI Policies Are Actually Governing
Most enterprise AI policies are written to satisfy auditors, not to govern anything. This piece names the three documents that govern nothing, the EU AI Act provisions your lawyers have not priced into liability models, and the four things to build instead of a principles statement.
15 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  AI Governance
Read →
8
Days until a power user exhausts a 128k-token context window
For: CTOs · AI Architects · Enterprise Technology Leaders
The AI Memory Problem Enterprises Are Paying to Ignore
Every AI agent you run starts each session with a blank slate. It cannot remember that the customer called three times last month or that your analyst already tried this approach. This piece explains why stateless AI is a structural ceiling on enterprise value - and the three architectures that break through it.
16 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
3
Providers control 87% of enterprise AI · average model lifecycle 14 months
For: Boards · CISOs · Chief Procurement Officers
What Boards Get Wrong About Foundation Model Concentration Risk
Azure is not a hedge. Your vendor does not manage it for you. Procurement cannot contract it away. This piece corrects the four misconceptions boards rely on - and gives five governance actions that actually reduce exposure before the deprecation notice arrives.
15 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  AI Governance
Read →
11%
Enterprises that have moved AI past pilot - despite 79% deploying it
For: CEOs · CDOs · AI Program Owners stuck in pilot
The 11 Percent: Why 89% of Enterprise AI Agents Never Reach Production
79% of enterprises have deployed AI. Only 11% have moved past pilot. This is a forensic analysis of the six failure modes that are killing enterprise AI programs - and a 90-day blueprint for the organizations that are serious about breaking through.
14 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
4.2×
Integration cost vs model API spend in agentic deployments
For: CTOs · Enterprise Architects · AI Program Leads
Agentic AI: The New Integration Tax
68% of enterprise agentic deployments exceeded integration budgets by 50% or more. The connector costs, permission overhead, and maintenance cycles that dwarf model API spend - and the architectural decisions that minimize the tax.
13 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Agentic AI
Read →
€82M
Fines and remediation orders in EU AI Act year one
For: General Counsel · Chief Compliance Officers · Boards
EU AI Act Enforcement: What Actually Happened in Year One
34 formal investigations. 61% of US multinationals with material compliance gaps. The enforcement pattern is clear - and the three actions that most reduce exposure are not the ones most compliance teams are prioritizing.
12 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Regulation
Read →
5
Production use cases with measurable ROI beyond text
For: CEOs · COOs · Enterprise Technology Leaders
Multimodal Enterprise AI: The Use Cases That Actually Work
Vision-language models unlocked enterprise applications text alone could not touch. Manufacturing QC, document processing, field service, medical imaging triage, retail visual search - and where AI still trails human experts.
12 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
76%
Enterprises reporting productivity gains without headcount reduction
For: CEOs · CFOs · Chief People Officers
The AI Productivity Paradox: Output Is Up, Headcount Is Flat
AI is measurably boosting individual output. But gains are absorbed by scope expansion, quality investment, and new capability - not cost reduction. The Jevons paradox explains where the value goes and what smart organizations do to capture it financially.
12 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Workforce
Read →
67%
Enterprise AI projects now requiring CFO-level approval
For: CIOs · CDOs · AI Program Owners seeking budget
The CFO Is Now Your AI Gatekeeper. How to Get Past the Budget Gate.
The four metrics that drive CFO approval, the framing errors that kill AI projects before review, and the ROI template that reliably gets funded. Payback periods, headcount neutrality, and risk-adjusted downside scenarios - in plain terms.
11 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  AI Strategy
Read →
1M
Tokens in Gemini 1.5 Pro · but "lost in the middle" degrades at scale
For: CTOs · AI Architects · Procurement Leaders evaluating models
The Context Window Arms Race: Does It Actually Matter?
Models are racing to expand context windows. Research shows performance collapse on information buried in the middle of long inputs. When long context wins, when it does not, and what to specify when selecting a model for enterprise workloads.
13 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
34
Countries funding national AI programs · 2 US vendors control 78%
For: Boards · General Counsel · Global CIOs
Sovereign AI: What the National Model Race Means for Enterprise
Data residency mandates are expanding. Vendor concentration in two US companies is creating strategic exposure that boards have not yet priced. The three enterprise decisions that sovereign AI makes more urgent - before your regulator makes them for you.
12 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Geopolitics
Read →
7B
Parameters - fine-tuned SLM beating GPT-4 on domain tasks
For: CTOs · AI Architects · Enterprise Technology Leaders
Small Language Models: The Enterprise Case
A fine-tuned 7B parameter model beats GPT-4 on domain-specific tasks in production. The data requirements, cost structure, and deployment patterns that make SLMs the right choice for high-volume, well-defined enterprise workloads.
13 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
N+M
MCP collapses N×M connector problem to N plus M
For: CTOs · Enterprise Architects · AI Integration Leads
MCP: Why the Model Context Protocol Changes Enterprise AI Integration
Every model needs a custom connector to every tool. MCP collapses this. How the protocol works, who is adopting it, and the security risks that enterprise adoption is exposing - before your team builds on top of it.
13 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
73%
Enterprise queries that do not need chain-of-thought reasoning
For: CTOs · AI Architects · Finance Leaders managing AI spend
Why Reasoning Models Are the Wrong Default for Enterprise
73% of enterprise queries do not need chain-of-thought reasoning. The routing strategy that eliminates 10-40x cost overruns on model inference - and the 27% of tasks where reasoning models actually earn their premium.
6 min read  ·  Jun 2026  ·  Enterprise AI
Read →
§ 18 · Research in Practice

What to Build Next — Your Enterprise AI Playbook.

Solutions I would put on the board agenda. Each is grounded in peer-reviewed research, scoped for Fortune 500 deployment, and designed to move a metric your CFO tracks. Click any solution to see the full brief, architecture, and deployment plan.

§ 20 · Selected Output

Research & recognition.

Strategy without research is opinion. The counsel I give boards is grounded in original, published, peer-reviewed work: 11 patents, 20+ publications in IEEE & Scopus journals, contributions to two books, hundreds of blogs and whitepapers, and invited keynotes on global stages across multiple continents.

Recognized seven times with international awards for breakthroughs in AI innovation and research.

[1]

11 patents: AI systems, security & enterprise intelligence

GRANTED · USPTO & INTERNATIONAL

[2]

20+ peer-reviewed publications

IEEE · SCOPUS · AGENTIC AI, ML & APPLIED INTELLIGENCE

[3]

Contributing author, 2 books

APPLIED AI & ENTERPRISE INNOVATION · IN PRINT

[4]

7× international awards for AI innovation & research

GLOBAL RECOGNITION · 2018 → PRESENT

[5]

Invited keynotes & global speaking

INTERNATIONAL INNOVATION CONFERENCES · MULTIPLE CONTINENTS

Fig. 8 · Generalization across domains, from CVS and Thermo Fisher in healthcare to Whirlpool and 3M in manufacturing. Hover to probe.
Hi-TechHealthcareLife SciencesFinanceEntertainmentManufacturingRetailFederalOil & Gas
§ 19 · Inference Modes

How leaders run AJ-1.

mode: enterprise

AI Transformation Leadership

The AI, innovation and growth mandate: define the intelligence strategy, architect the platform, build the organization, and deliver outcomes the board can see and measure.

mode: investors & VCs

AI Diligence & Portfolio Strategy

Research-grade evaluation of AI claims, technical moats and defensibility. The difference between a model and a wrapper, explained before the wire, not after. Plus value-creation playbooks for the portfolio.

mode: boards & c-suites

Executive & Board Advisory

A standing thought partner on where frontier AI is heading, what it means for competitive position, and how to invest with conviction instead of FOMO.

mode: global stages

Keynotes & Thought Leadership

Talks that make the intelligence economy concrete for executive audiences. Frontier research translated into operating playbooks, with commercial clarity.

§ 20 · Correspondence

Open a channel. The interesting work starts with one candid conversation.

For boards, investors and founders serious about technology-forward growth. Peer review welcome. No deck required. Honestly, preferred without one.

Santa Monica · California +1 858 499 9131 Status: accepting hard problems