Organizational Diagnostics · Bozeman, MT
OuterSight identifies the structural conditions limiting organizational performance — the invisible architecture that determines whether good ideas reach the people who can act on them.
The consulting practice produces that diagnosis through direct engagement. The platform in development produces it continuously, at scale, through an AI-native telemetry layer embedded in the organization itself.
The founding observation
The mode of engagement matters as much as the content of the problem.
Not just what an organization is working on — but how it receives what it knows, how it moves information to the people who can act on it, and how it relates to difficulty when difficulty arrives.
The content of a problem is almost always legible. The mode of engagement with that problem is more elusive. Two organizations facing identical problems will produce completely different outcomes based entirely on how they engage.
The problem is rarely the problem. The mode is the problem.
OuterSight does one thing: shows organizations what they can't see about themselves. Not what they're doing wrong. What's in the way of what they're capable of. That's an entirely different question — and almost nobody has asked it directly.
The work
OuterSight serves mid-market companies and PE-backed portfolios where the gap between capability and performance is real, stubborn, and worth examining seriously.
The diagnostic produces a precise outside-in profile of the organizational conditions at work. The engagement that follows addresses those conditions directly — not the symptoms they produce.
The technology makes it solvable at scale.
Who this is for
"Leadership senses something is off but can't see it clearly from inside the building. The results aren't matching the capability. Something structural is working against the organization — quietly, consistently — and it's almost never what anyone thinks it is."
Start the conversation
If something isn't working the way it should — and the standard explanations aren't landing — that's worth a conversation.