The canon

The body of work, on the shelf.

Eight volumes. The foundational 2025 book and seven supporting white papers developing the architecture across belief continuity, the Vase Index, the Belief-Fit Matrix, the Mispriced-Believer Signature, and the operational discipline beneath them. Each volume carries its own ISBN. The seven white papers are free to read; the book is available by email.

I
Foundership
2025
II
Bridging the Gap
Read →
III
In the Bricks
Read →
IV
Under New Mgmt
Read →
V
Quant & Qual
Read →
VI
Mispriced Believer
Read →
VII
AXIS as OS
Read →
VIII
Belief-Fit Matrix
Read →
Foundership Institute · Eight volumes · 2025–2026
The volumes

Eight volumes. One architecture, named eight ways.

I
2025

Foundership.

Abstract
The canonical first statement of the framework. Foundership is a first-principles discipline concerned with the founder as originator of organizational meaning, and the structural conditions under which that meaning is transmitted, maintained, eroded, or restored across the organizational life cycle. Introduces the Founder's Gap substitution event, the AXIS recursive four-phase architecture (Alignment, eXecution, Identity, Self), the Vase as visual instrument for belief continuity, and the five operational tenets that ground the discipline. The book the practice — and the seven companion papers — stand on.
ISBN 979-8-218-71006-4 · Graham · 2025
Published
Available now
II
2025

Bridging the Founder's Gap.

Abstract
A position paper on belief erosion in growth-stage organizations and the structural discipline required to prevent drift. Names the Founder's Gap as a four-dimensional phenomenon — belief decay, output persistence, misalignment symptoms, risk zones — and contrasts the discipline against Kotter (1995), Lewin (1947), Schein (2010), Gulati (2022), Senge (1990), and Christensen (1997). Three contributions: conceptual definition of the gap, comparative analysis of six seminal frameworks, illustrative vignettes from ARES Watch Company, Steve Jobs's return to Apple, and Howard Schultz's 2008 Starbucks retraining. Proposes a research agenda to validate Foundership as a discipline.
ISBN 979-8-9965431-5-1 · Graham · 2025
Download PDF· 977 KB
In production
Late 2026
III
2026

The Vase Is in the Bricks.

Abstract
Extends the framework by introducing a fourth source of belief maintenance: the vessel — the physical architectural infrastructure inside which a small business operates. At small-business scale, the building itself is a belief-maintenance variable operating partially independently of the current operator. Develops triple-layer L1 maintenance (vessel + operator-lineage + product) as a canonical Intact-mode signature observable in heritage small businesses. Engages servicescape theory (Bitner, 1992), third-place sociology (Oldenburg, 1989), Jacobs (1961), Lewicka (2011), and Strati/Yanow. Two worked cases — Cascade House (Lynnwood, WA) and Jimmy's Pizza & Pasta (Stanwood, WA, 1986–present) — presented through participant-observer longitudinal methodology.
ISBN 979-8-9965431-0-6 · Graham · 2026
Download PDF· 98 KB
In production
Late 2026
IV
2026

What "Under New Management" Really Means.

Abstract
Argues that publicly-displayed storefront signs — Under New Management, Family Owned Since 1962, Locally Owned, Original Owner Still Cooking, Same Great Taste — New Look, Grand Re-Opening, Going Out of Business — constitute a publicly readable, photographable, datable system of belief-state declarations that has been operating in American small-business commerce for over a century. Drawing on linguistic landscape studies (Landry & Bourhis, 1997), geosemiotics (Scollon & Scollon, 2003), atmospherics (Kotler, 1973), signaling theory (Spence, Akerlof, Connelly), brand identity (Aaker), and impression management (Goffman, 1959), develops a taxonomy of belief-signaling signs and five empirical research questions.
ISBN 979-8-9965431-1-3 · Graham · 2026
Download PDF· 89 KB
In production
Late 2026
V
2026

Quantification AND Qualification of Belief.

Abstract
Specifies the methodological position of the Vase instrument as an explicitly mixed-methods framework. The Vase performs two distinct, simultaneous operations on the same belief state: quantification (L1, L2, L3, Virtue numerical scores) and qualification (Intact, Founder's Gap, Restored, Belief Performance categorical modes). The signed Founder's Gap value bridges the two. Draws on Creswell (2014), Tashakkori & Teddlie (2010), Johnson & Onwuegbuzie (2004), Bridgman (1927) on operational definitions, and the grounded-theory tradition (Glaser & Strauss, Strauss & Corbin, Charmaz). Positions Foundership as a contribution to the third methodological movement in social research — against the quantification-only frameworks (Hofstede, Denison, Cameron & Quinn) and qualification-only models (Schein).
ISBN 979-8-9965431-2-0 · Graham · 2026
Download PDF· 86 KB
In production
Late 2026
VI
2026

The Mispriced-Believer Signature.

Abstract
Specifies a structural class of founder-led enterprises identifiable through a characteristic four-metric signature: belief continuity (L1) substantially exceeds realized value (L3), producing a signed negative Founder's Gap across multiple measurement windows. Appears in two forms. Public form: Black Rifle Coffee Company, Yeti Holdings, Sturm Ruger, GoPro at various points in their public-market trajectories. Private form: the Ramsey enterprise, Patagonia, Chick-fil-A, In-N-Out Burger, Montana Knife Company. Distinguished from value-investing undervaluation (Graham & Dodd, 1934), intangible-asset measurement deficits (Lev, 2001), and founder-CEO/family-firm performance premia (Anderson & Reeb, 2003). Worked cases drawn from the 509+ firm calibration library.
ISBN 979-8-9965431-4-4 · Graham · 2026
Download PDF· 97 KB
In production
Late 2026
VII
2026

AXIS as the Operating System.

Abstract
What Moneyball did to baseball, AXIS does to leadership. Specifies the structural position of AXIS — the four-phase architecture of Alignment, eXecution, Identity, Self — as the architectural layer underneath the existing leadership canon. The principal leadership frameworks (Sinek, Schein, Kotter, Drucker, Mintzberg, Senge, Lencioni, Gulati) operate on the structural variable that AXIS names without naming it themselves. Each canonical framework maps into a specific AXIS phase. Engages Kuhn (1962) on paradigm shifts, Boyd (Osinga, 2007; Coram, 2002), Henderson & Clark (1990) on architectural innovation, and Iansiti & Lakhani (2020) on operating architectures.
ISBN 979-8-9965431-3-7 · Graham · 2026
Download PDF· 96 KB
In production
Late 2026
VIII
2026

The Belief-Fit Matrix.

Abstract
Underperformance in a founder-led organization is routinely treated as a single problem with a single family of cures. This paper argues that what presents as one problem is in fact four structurally distinct states, separable along two dimensions — the continuity of an organization's founding belief, and the fit between that belief and the environment that prices it. Crossing the two yields a 2×2: Aligned, Strategic Drift, the Founder's Gap, and Compound Failure. The central claim: Strategic Drift and the Founder's Gap are frequently indistinguishable on financial statements yet require opposite interventions — the standard cure for one actively deepens the other. Grounds the matrix in the Vase instrument's L1 (belief continuity) and L3 (environment-mediated value).
ISBN 979-8-9965431-6-8 · Graham · 2026
Download PDF· 72 KB
In production
Late 2026

License the canon for your shelf.

Single volumes for the individual reader. Full-canon bundles for advisors and operator-team libraries. Partner-branded co-editions for accredited distribution channels — Ramsey, EntreLeadership, Black Rifle Coffee Company.