Ideas & Research

The thinking behind management by design.

The management manifesto, competitive analysis, and the case for why systematic management beats hoping you hired good managers.

All resources

Manifesto

Management by Design, Not by Luck.

By Phillip Ford, Founder & CEO · Cadence · 2026

For most of human history, proximity solved management. The factory floor, the open office, the hallway conversation — these weren't management techniques. They were the ambient infrastructure that made management happen by default. Managers could see who was struggling. Employees could read whether their manager was in a mood to hear hard news. The informal check-in, the overheard celebration, the body language read — these were the actual mechanisms of organizational health, and nobody had to design them. They were just there.

Then remote and hybrid work arrived, and we removed that infrastructure without building anything to replace it.

"What we have left is a lottery. Some employees get a gifted manager who coaches them, advocates for them, and develops them deliberately. Most don't. And the gap is widening."

We didn't get good at managing people. We got good at managing people who were physically present. The hallway conversation masked inconsistent 1:1s. Proximity compensated for the manager who forgot to give feedback. Being in the same room made it harder to be ignored. Remove the room, and what's left is the quality of the system — and most organizations discovered they didn't have one.

The fragmented stack was built for a different era.

The HR tech industry's response to distributed work was to add more tools. A tool for 1:1s. A tool for performance reviews. A tool for surveys. A tool for recognition. A tool for ER case management. A tool for OKRs. By 2024, the average People leader managed six or more platforms that didn't talk to each other, shared no data, and produced no unified picture of what was actually happening in the organization.

The problem isn't that any single tool is bad. 15Five has good pulse surveys. Lattice has a solid performance review workflow. Fellow transcribes meetings well. The problem is that management isn't a series of discrete transactions to be optimized in isolation. It's a continuous relationship, and the intelligence about that relationship — what happened in the 1:1, how the recognition ratio is trending, what the 9-box said, what the ER case history looks like — lives across all six platforms and doesn't connect.

The CHRO who wants to know whether a manager is effective has to pull from four systems, manually correlate them, and hope the picture that emerges is accurate. It never is. And it's always late.

Management by design means building the system.

The insight behind Cadence is straightforward: if you want consistent management outcomes across a distributed workforce, you have to design them into the system. You can't hire your way to consistent management quality. You can't train your way to it. You have to build a system that makes good management the default, not the exception.

That system has to do several things. It has to capture the conversation — not the form submitted an hour later, but what was actually said. It has to surface goal context in real time, not at the quarterly review. It has to give the manager coaching based on what actually happened, not generic management training divorced from their specific situation. And it has to give leadership the signal they need to intervene before problems become exits or litigation.

"The 9-box shouldn't be a once-a-year conversation that depends on who speaks loudest in the room. The ER case shouldn't open cold — it should open with years of management context already attached. The Culture Scorecard shouldn't be a lagging indicator. It should tell you what's happening right now."

This is what we built. Not another point solution that optimizes one transaction. A unified operating plane — the place where management actually happens — that produces the intelligence none of the individual pieces can.

The stakes are not abstract.

An employee who gets a consistently excellent manager has a fundamentally different career trajectory than one who doesn't. They receive more coaching, clearer feedback, and better advocacy. They understand what's expected of them and how to grow. They are recognized appropriately, developed deliberately, and retained when competitors come calling.

An employee who gets an inconsistent manager — or worse, a bad one — often doesn't find out about the problem until it has already damaged them. The feedback gap that became a surprise PIP. The 9-box conversation that happened without their input. The recognition that never came and the resignation that followed the silence.

Management quality is, in most organizations, the single largest determinant of employee retention and development. And in most organizations, it is entirely luck of the draw.

That is what Cadence exists to change. Not by making every manager naturally gifted — that's impossible. By building the system that makes every manager behave more like the best ones do, consistently, regardless of their natural talent.

Management by design. Not by luck.

— Phillip Ford, Founder & CEO, Cadence · 2026

Competitive Research · Q2 2026

One plane. Six competitors. Zero overlap on what matters.

A module-by-module coverage matrix of Lattice, 15Five, Culture Amp, Fellow, HR Acuity, and Betterworks — and where each falls short. ✓ = substantive coverage · ~ = partial or shallow · — = absent.

Module Cadence Lattice 15Five Culture Amp Fellow HR Acuity Betterworks
Core Management
1:1 Management Engine ~ ~
AI meeting coaching (dual-lane) ~ Kona only ~ transcript only
Goals & OKRs
Goals & OKR Tracking ~
Live goal context in 1:1 ~
Talent Calibration
9-Box Talent Calibration ~ ~ ~
Blind dual-rating with coaching ~
Employee Relations
ER Command Center
Recognition
Recognition & Rewards ~
5:1 ratio tracking (L2 visible)
Surveys
Survey Engine (pulse, engagement, exit) ~
Manager-level signal attribution ~ ~ ~
Intelligence Layer
Unified Culture Scorecard
Cross-signal turnover prediction ~ ~
The Structural Wins

Why these gaps are architectural, not tactical.

These aren't features competitors will ship in the next release. They require a different foundation.

1:1 as the atomic unit — not a form

Cadence captures the actual conversation — notes, context, coaching — not a form submitted an hour later. No competitor owns the meeting itself. Fellow captures transcripts. Cadence coaches from them and connects them to every other signal in the system.

Dual private coaching after every meeting

Both the manager and the employee receive separate, private AI coaching after each 1:1 — based on what was actually said. This is a compounding capability no competitor has attempted. It's not a feature. It's a philosophy that changes behavior at scale.

ER upstream prevention, not just case management

HR Acuity manages ER cases after they surface. Cadence reduces the number of cases that surface — by coaching managers in real time, tracking recognition ratios, and flagging declining patterns before they become formal issues. Prevention is cheaper than investigation.

Culture Scorecard — cross-signal composite

No competitor can correlate 1:1 quality + ER patterns + recognition ratios + survey sentiment + goal attainment + 9-box movement into one composite score. They don't own all the planes. Cadence does. This intelligence is structurally impossible to replicate from a single-plane foundation.

Buyer's Guide

Where each tool is genuinely best.

We're not going to tell you every competitor is bad. They're not. Here's an honest read of where each wins — and when Cadence is the right call.

Lattice
Best for: Performance review-centric orgs at 1,000+ seats

Best-in-class performance review workflow engine. Strongest OKR cascading at enterprise scale. HRIS creates real switching cost lock-in. Highest CHRO brand recognition in the enterprise segment.

Choose Cadence when: You need ER, AI coaching, 9-box intelligence, or a unified Culture Scorecard that Lattice can't produce.

15Five
Best for: SMBs wanting easy, affordable entry

Transparent pricing ($4/$11/$16), easiest to buy without a sales cycle. Manager Effectiveness Indicator (MEI) is directionally right. Kona Coach is the closest market analog to post-meeting AI coaching.

Choose Cadence when: You need the full intelligence layer — 9-box, ER, Culture Scorecard — that 15Five can't produce at any tier.

Culture Amp
Best for: Survey-first, data-driven People orgs

#1 engagement survey platform with 1.5B+ benchmark data points. In-house I/O psychology team. AI comment summaries that turn survey analysis from days to hours.

Choose Cadence when: You need survey signals connected to manager-level accountability, not just department dashboards.

Fellow
Best for: Engineering and product teams who want transcription

Best-in-class AI transcription (95%+, 92 languages). SOC 2 Type II + HIPAA. "Ask Fellow" cross-meeting memory is genuinely impressive.

Choose Cadence when: You need transcription + coaching + goals + 9-box + ER in one system. Fellow is a great transcription tool; Cadence is a management operating plane.

HR Acuity
Best for: ER-heavy orgs (Adobe, LinkedIn scale)

Deepest ER case management in the market. olivER™ AI for case summarization and risk flagging. Attorney-client privilege protections built in. Trusted by legal teams at F500s.

Choose Cadence when: You want to reduce ER case volume, not just manage cases better. Cadence is prevention; HR Acuity is response.

Betterworks
Best for: OKR-obsessed enterprise orgs

Strongest pure-OKR platform at enterprise scale (Colgate-Palmolive, Worldpay). Goal Assist AI coaches employees on goal quality. Calibration AI with bias-reduction tooling.

Choose Cadence when: You need OKRs + everything else connected — 1:1s, recognition, ER, surveys — in one system that compounds.

Ready to see the unified plane?

We'll show you exactly how the modules connect and where the intelligence comes from that competitors can't produce.