As artificial intelligence accelerates business innovation, a new white paper argues that traditional governance structures are failing to keep pace, proposing a novel executive management discipline to embed trust directly into growth strategies. Published by the GTMGO Canon, Working Paper No. 1, titled ‘Engineering Trust: Why the AI Economy May Require a New Executive Management Discipline,’ introduces Go-To-Market Governance (GTMGO) as a proposed discipline aimed at engineering governance into growth rather than applying it as an afterthought.
The paper, authored by Peter Q. John, a communication and compliance executive, addresses what it terms the ‘Governance Velocity Gap
’—the organizational challenge created when innovation outpaces governance. John argues that while enterprises have excelled in customer acquisition, digital platforms, and operational efficiency, governance remains siloed across independent functions. As the velocity of innovation increases, so does the challenge of preserving trust, making a unified governance discipline essential for AI-enabled enterprises.
Working Paper No. 1 establishes the Version 1.0 Freeze of foundational concepts within the GTMGO Canon. These include ‘Governance Engineering’ as the scientific methodology of the discipline; the ‘Go-To-Market Governance Officer’ as the executive accountable for achieving ‘Trusted Growth’; and ‘GTMGO Thermodynamic-Friction
,’ which describes the cumulative organizational resistance generated when governance evolves more slowly than enterprise change. The paper emphasizes that these concepts are not a restatement of existing legal, regulatory, or compliance frameworks but rather a synthesis of recurring engineering principles observed across trusted professions and regulated industries, including aviation, legal practice, professional sports labor relations, entertainment, broadcasting, healthcare-adjacent governance, privacy, cybersecurity, and enterprise leadership.
The GTMGO Canon is being released as a sequence of working papers, reflecting the belief that enduring management disciplines evolve through disciplined inquiry, practical application, and constructive criticism rather than by declaration alone. The Version 1.0 Freeze preserves the foundational architecture while inviting thoughtful examination. Executives, directors, governance professionals, lawyers, technologists, engineers, cybersecurity practitioners, privacy leaders, healthcare administrators, financial institutions, regulators, researchers, and academics are invited to review the working paper and contribute constructive observations. Meaningful feedback will be documented through the GTMGO Research Notes process and considered for future working papers.
John, who holds a JD and MBA and is the founder of the GTMGO Canon, poses a central question: ‘If the AI economy has transformed how organizations innovate, is it time to rethink how organizations govern innovation?’ The paper is expected to be released in the coming weeks, with future publications preserving the integrity of the Version 1.0 Canon while documenting subsequent refinements.
The implications of this announcement are significant for organizations navigating the AI economy. By proposing a unified governance discipline, the GTMGO Canon aims to help companies maintain trust while scaling innovation, potentially reshaping how executive teams approach risk and compliance in an era of rapid technological change.
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