IT maturity
Standards, access, documentation, support posture, cloud hygiene, and operating controls.
If you are managing your tools more than using them, the architecture is wrong. If things break when you are not watching, it is not built right. Map the technical lane before anyone scopes the work.
This creates a receipt through the LIFTStack discovery endpoint, then routes the request to the right technical lane.
The wizard routes by operating risk, not by buzzword. Every route should produce a map, owner, acceptance check, and receipt.
Standards, access, documentation, support posture, cloud hygiene, and operating controls.
Workflow triggers, approvals, handoffs, alerts, reporting, error states, and time saved.
Intake, summaries, routing, knowledge work, dashboards, governed actions, and review gates.
Apps, domains, databases, storage, environments, deploys, logs, and rollback posture.
Broken apps, failed deployments, disconnected systems, fragile automation, and missing ownership.
Roadmap governance, vendor review, architecture decisions, technical judgment, and cadence.
Choose the right technical lane before anyone scopes the work.
Name systems, owners, integrations, access, dependencies, and risk points.
Decide what proof must exist after the work ships.
Submit the technical signal before the build call begins.