Lead author: Guillaume Mariani
AI co-authors: ChatGPT (OpenAI) and Copilot (Microsoft)
AI contributors: Claude (Anthropic), Gemini (Google), Le Chat (Mistral AI), and Perplexity (Perplexity AI)
Date: May 2026
Arc 4: The Practice of Future Leadership
Abstract
Paper 10 is the moment of truth for Arc 4: the point where theory must become practice, or risk remaining inert. It closes Arc 4 by translating the full FILE⁷ architecture into an executive-ready activation roadmap. It presents the FILE⁷ CEO Playbook: a 90-day, phase-gated sequence that aligns execution, embodiment, AI governance, organizational operating systems, maturity diagnostics, cultural translation, human-AI workflows, stakeholder legitimacy, and leadership formation.
The roadmap does not complete FILE⁷ transformation. It establishes the conditions under which augmented leadership can become real. The first 90 days are not a sprint toward completion; they are a disciplined sequence of commitments, gates, safeguards, and practices that prevent premature execution and protect human dignity, agency, contestability, and judgment in AI-mediated organizations.
This paper argues that a CEO cannot implement FILE⁷ by announcing a transformation program. FILE⁷ must be executed and embodied through leadership identity, governance design, human-AI workflow redesign, stakeholder listening, cultural translation, maturity review, and institutional learning. The CEO does not merely implement FILE⁷. The CEO becomes the first test of whether FILE⁷ is real.
The 90-day roadmap is therefore not a project management tool. It is a disciplined sequence of governance commitments, embodiment practices, cultural translation protocols, and operational safeguards designed to make augmented leadership real rather than performed. Without such a roadmap, FILE⁷ risks becoming another corporate language admired in theory but ignored in practice. With it, leaders have a concrete path to execute responsibly, embody authentically, and scale globally without sacrificing legitimacy.
As the final paper of Arc 4, Paper 10 turns FILE⁷ from conceptual architecture into disciplined CEO action. It closes the arc by handing the framework back to leaders, organizations, educators, and institutions with a simple question: will they merely admire the architecture, or will they have the courage to practice it?
Keywords: FILE⁷; CEO playbook; augmented leadership; 90-day roadmap; phase-gated activation; execution; embodiment; AI governance; organizational operating system; human-AI workflows; leadership maturity; stakeholder legitimacy; cultural translation; transformation; executive leadership; adaptive intelligence; political intelligence; organizational rituals; governance; human-centered AI.
1. Introduction — From Architecture to Action
A leadership theory becomes real only when it changes what leaders do, how organizations decide, and how power is governed under pressure.
Paper 10 is the operational synthesis of Arc 4. Papers 1–9 built the architecture of FILE⁷: praxis, execution, embodiment, safeguards, maturity, AI governance, organizational operating systems, education, and cultural translation. Paper 10 now translates that architecture into a CEO-level activation sequence.
The CEO does not merely implement FILE⁷. The CEO becomes the first test of whether FILE⁷ is real.
This matters because the AI age is not a future scenario. Organizations are already deploying AI systems that reshape power, judgment, work, language, attention, evaluation, and human agency. The question is no longer whether leaders need a human-centered framework for augmented leadership, but how quickly they can embed one before instrumentalization, AI Capture, performative embodiment, and civilizational narrowing become normalized inside organizational life.
Paper 9 established that global relevance requires local legitimacy. Paper 10 operationalizes that insight by ensuring that cultural translation is not an afterthought. It is a Day 1 requirement. A CEO who activates FILE⁷ without translation may move quickly, but not responsibly.
The core question of this paper is:
What should a CEO do in the first 90 days to begin executing and embodying FILE⁷ responsibly?
The first 90 days of FILE⁷ activation do not prove that FILE⁷ has been achieved. They prove whether the CEO is serious enough to begin. A CEO who begins seriously asks: am I creating the conditions under which FILE⁷ can become real — governed, embodied, translated, and executable beyond my personal intention?
This playbook is not a generic transformation checklist. It is the disciplined beginning of FILE⁷ praxis. The first 90 days do not complete transformation; they establish the conditions under which transformation can become legitimate, governed, embodied, translated, and sustained.
2. Arc 4 Integration Map
To transition FILE⁷ from architectural design to executive activation, Paper 10 serves as an integration engine. The prior nine papers of Arc 4 do not sit alongside this playbook as historical background; they provide the infrastructure, rules, and system boundaries that the CEO must execute.
| Prior Paper | Core contribution | How it appears in Paper 10 |
|---|---|---|
| Paper 1 — FILE⁷: The Threshold of Praxis | Establishes the praxis threshold and the core risks of augmented leadership | CEO intent, boundary discipline, threshold risks, and the transition from theory to practice |
| Paper 2 — The FILE⁷ Execution Engine | Designs human-AI workflow orchestration and execution logic | Workflow redesign, execution loops, and high-impact human-AI pilots |
| Paper 3 — The Embodied Leader in FILE⁷ | Defines leadership identity, cognitive restraint, and embodiment under pressure | CEO Embodiment Contract, embodiment reviews, and leadership formation |
| Paper 4 — The Praxis Threshold Toolkit | Creates guardrails against instrumentalization, AI Capture, performative embodiment, and civilizational narrowing | Failure modes, phase gates, safeguards, and anti-theater diagnostics |
| Paper 5 — Measuring FILE⁷ | Provides a maturity model across the seven Es | Maturity baseline, Day 90 maturity review, and evidence logic |
| Paper 6 — FILE⁷ and AI Governance | Designs human-centered, accountable AI systems | AI exposure map, governance forums, accountability assignment, and contestability channels |
| Paper 7 — The FILE⁷ Organizational Operating System | Designs structures, rituals, decision rights, and operating rhythms | FILE⁷ Steering Forum, weekly rhythm, rituals, and governance cadences |
| Paper 8 — From MBA to MLT | Reimagines leadership education through Management, Leadership, and Technology | Executive formation, AI literacy, judgment under pressure, and leadership development |
| Paper 9 — FILE⁷ Across Cultures and Civilizations | Establishes cultural translation, the ethical kernel, and locally compiled interfaces | Translation checkpoints, epistemic veto, local legitimacy, and global rollout constraints |
This map shows that Paper 10 is not a standalone playbook. It is the activation engine for the entire Arc 4 architecture. CEOs should use it as a sequencing guide: if a decision touches AI governance, consult Paper 6; if it touches maturity, consult Paper 5; if it touches global rollout, consult Paper 9; if it touches leadership behavior, consult Paper 3.
A CEO who receives the 90-day roadmap without the formation that Paper 8 describes will have the map but not the judgment to use it wisely.
3. What Makes a FILE⁷ CEO Different?
Before the roadmap begins, the identity behind the roadmap must be established. A roadmap without an identity is a sequence of tasks. A roadmap inhabited by a leader with genuine formation becomes a sequence of commitments.
The FILE⁷ CEO is not primarily a strategist, transformation sponsor, technology adopter, or change manager. Strategy, sponsorship, technology, and change management all matter. But none of them defines FILE⁷ leadership.
The FILE⁷ CEO is a steward of human agency, an architect of accountable intelligence, a translator across cultures and stakeholders, an embodied practitioner under pressure, a learner who resists AI Capture, and a guardian against instrumentalization.
The FILE⁷ CEO is a guardian against instrumentalization because they refuse to let efficiency, speed, or control override human dignity, agency, and empowerment. They understand that AI adoption is not leadership. It is procurement unless governed by judgment, contestability, and legitimacy.
The FILE⁷ CEO must change their calendar, not only their language.
| Traditional CEO | FILE⁷ CEO |
|---|---|
| Maximizes shareholder value | Balances value creation with dignity, agency, and ecosystem legitimacy |
| Delegates transformation | Personally embodies and stewards transformation |
| Focuses on efficiency | Protects human agency and empowerment |
| Measures outputs | Measures judgment, trust, governance, and legitimacy |
| Treats AI as tool or competitive advantage | Governs AI as a socio-technical responsibility |
| Drives global rollout | Requires cultural translation before scale |
| Leads through positional authority | Leads through accountable stewardship |
The CEO does not merely implement FILE⁷. The CEO becomes the first test of whether FILE⁷ is real.
This sentence is not rhetorical. It names a structural reality of organizational life: institutions take their most significant behavioral signals from those who hold the most power within them. What the CEO does — not what the CEO communicates, sponsors, or approves — determines more about what the organization becomes than any policy, framework, or governance mechanism.
4. Execution vs. Embodiment in FILE⁷
The distinction between execution and embodiment is the most important philosophical clarification in the playbook, because confusing them is the most common way that FILE⁷ transformation produces sophisticated theater rather than genuine practice.
| Execution | Embodiment |
|---|---|
| What leaders do | Who leaders become under pressure |
| Operational: workflows, rituals, metrics, governance | Ontological: identity, character, presence, judgment |
| Can be distributed with oversight | Cannot be delegated |
| Measured through outputs and changed systems | Measured through behavior under pressure, across time |
| Turns principles into action | Makes principles credible |
| Requires design | Requires formation |
Execution provides the structures, workflows, and governance that make FILE⁷ operational. Embodiment provides the identity, character, and presence that make it credible. Together, they ensure that FILE⁷ is not only a framework on paper, but a lived practice.
Execution without embodiment becomes theater: the workflows run, the rituals occur, the governance forums meet, and the language of FILE⁷ is spoken — but decisions under pressure reveal that the theory has not been internalized.
Embodiment without execution becomes private virtue without institutional consequence: the leader may be genuinely formed, but that formation has no organizational expression.
Execution without embodiment becomes theater. Embodiment without execution becomes private virtue without institutional consequence.
Embodiment must be reviewed weekly; execution must be reviewed daily. The CEO playbook cannot produce full embodiment in 90 days. What it can do is create the conditions — disciplined practices, structured reflection, organizational accountability, and repeated pressure-testing — under which embodiment can begin.
5. The CEO’s Five Non-Delegable Responsibilities
The CEO is not the sponsor of a program. The CEO is the first test of whether FILE⁷ is real. The five responsibilities below can be supported by others, but they cannot be delegated away.
1. Sponsorship
The CEO gives FILE⁷ legitimacy, visibility, and priority. Without explicit sponsorship, FILE⁷ becomes optional.
2. Stewardship
The CEO protects FILE⁷ from instrumentalization, AI Capture, short-term performance pressure, and governance theater.
3. Embodiment
The CEO models judgment over automation, dignity over efficiency, legitimacy over speed, and courage over convenience.
4. Translation
The CEO ensures FILE⁷ is culturally translated, locally legitimate, institutionally grounded, and stakeholder-validated.
5. Institutionalization
The CEO embeds FILE⁷ into governance forums, rituals, decision rights, human-AI workflows, leadership development, maturity reviews, and learning loops.
These responsibilities connect directly to the phase gates of the roadmap. Sponsorship and embodiment begin before Phase 1. Stewardship governs Phase 1. Translation and governance shape Phase 2. Institutionalization anchors Phase 3.
If the CEO delegates FILE⁷ entirely to HR, strategy, IT, consultants, or transformation teams, FILE⁷ will become a program rather than a leadership practice.
6. The CEO Embodiment Contract
Embodiment is not only a private practice. It is a governance commitment — one that must be visible, accountable, and institutionally protected if it is to produce organizational consequences.
The CEO Embodiment Contract is the institutional expression of that commitment.
The CEO commits to:
- preserving human agency under pressure;
- challenging AI outputs when judgment requires it;
- protecting contestability even when dissent is inconvenient;
- resisting the use of FILE⁷ language for instrumentalization;
- modeling cultural humility before global rollout;
- acknowledging publicly when leadership practice violates FILE⁷ commitments;
- submitting their own behavior to executive review.
Organizations mirror their leaders. If the CEO speaks FILE⁷ but behaves against it, employees will follow the actions, not the words. A CEO who speaks eloquently about human dignity and then approves an AI-enabled performance management system that employees experience as surveillance teaches the organization that dignity language is safe to use when dignity practice is not required.
This is why the CEO Embodiment Protocol is not a wellness practice. It is the single most important governance mechanism in the playbook.
If the CEO does not embody FILE⁷, the organization will perform it.
The CEO Embodiment Contract requires three practices:
- A private embodiment journal, in which the CEO examines decisions against FILE⁷ commitments.
- A monthly executive embodiment review, in which the CEO submits their leadership behavior to honest evaluation by the executive team.
- An independently protected feedback channel, including anonymous input from executive peers, employee representatives, and frontline voices, to reduce sycophancy and power distortion.
The CEO must share at least one embodiment insight with the executive team every month. This does not require performative vulnerability. It requires disciplined accountability.
CEO Embodiment Contract Template
I, [CEO Name], commit to:
- Preserving human agency in all decisions involving AI.
- Challenging AI outputs when judgment requires it.
- Protecting contestability even when dissent is inconvenient.
- Resisting instrumentalization of FILE⁷ language.
- Modeling cultural humility before global rollout.
- Acknowledging when my leadership violates FILE⁷ commitments.
- Submitting my behavior to executive and stakeholder-informed review.
Signed: ____________________ Date: ____________________
7. The FILE⁷ Activation Sequence: A Phase-Gated 90-Day Roadmap
The 90-day roadmap rejects linear, time-driven change management. In complex socio-technical systems, chronological progress can become an illusion. Moving forward based entirely on the calendar creates a dangerous environment where organizations execute before they govern and automate before they understand.
This playbook is not a checklist, not a communication strategy, not a one-size-fits-all transformation program, not a delegatable HR or IT initiative, not a global rollout guide that bypasses cultural translation, and not a guarantee of success in 90 days.
It is a disciplined 90-day sequence for executing and embodying FILE⁷. It is a phase-gated roadmap that prevents premature execution. It is a CEO-owned commitment to human dignity, agency, contestability, cultural translation, and long-term maturity.
The 90 days are not a sprint toward completion. They are a sequence of disciplined commitments that prevent premature execution.
The roadmap is organized into three state-dependent phases. The CEO should not move forward automatically just because the calendar has advanced. If a phase fails to clear its gates, the sequence must pause and the system must be revised.
The Four Phase Gates
Every phase must clear four gates:
- Governance gate: Are decision rights, accountability, escalation, and oversight in place?
- Legitimacy gate: Have affected stakeholders been heard, and has their input changed decisions?
- Embodiment gate: Has the CEO demonstrated FILE⁷ behavior under pressure?
- Translation gate: Has the local context been considered before scale?
These gates are not symbolic. If governance is not ready, execution must pause.
| Phase | Phase-gate criteria | Primary validation | If failed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 — Diagnose and Stabilize | Maturity baseline, AI exposure map, stakeholder legitimacy map, cultural translation risks identified | CEO, initial core group, Legal/Ethics, Chief AI Officer | Pause and revise diagnostic work |
| Phase 2 — Design and Mobilize | Steering Forum charter, ethical kernel, workflow redesign plan, ritual calendar, pilot portfolio, leadership formation plan | Steering Forum | Revisit design with additional stakeholder input |
| Phase 3 — Execute and Anchor | Pilot launch report, AI governance activation, maturity progress review, CEO embodiment reflection, 12-month roadmap | Steering Forum and Board | Delay scaling until gaps are addressed |
8. Sequencing Constraints and Dependency Map
In the execution of a socio-technical operating system, the order of operations determines the safety of the final system. When a CEO jumps ahead to highly visible operational tasks while skipping diagnostic and governance steps, the framework’s mechanics become separated from its ethical controls.
Skipping dependencies creates playbook theater.
| Before executing this operational move… | This systemic step must be validated first… | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Human-AI workflow redesign | AI exposure mapping and AI governance baseline | Workflows cannot be redesigned safely if existing AI risks are unknown |
| Operational pilot selection | Maturity baseline and stakeholder legitimacy listening | Pilots must address real gaps, not convenient opportunities |
| Global system rollout | Cultural translation audit and regional legitimacy validation | Global rollout without local adaptation risks civilizational narrowing |
| Live AI platform deployment | Human judgment checkpoints and contestability pathways | AI systems must not operate without human accountability |
| Executive embodiment review | CEO Embodiment Contract and leadership formation modules | Review without formation becomes performative |
| Public FILE⁷ strategy communication | Internal governance protocols and ethical kernel definition | Communication before governance becomes branding |
| Enterprise-wide scaling | Phase-gate review and failure-mode assessment | Scale without review amplifies unresolved risks |
This sequencing is an ethical issue, not only an operational one. If an enterprise scales an automated workflow before establishing accountability structures and contestability channels, it is not merely mismanaging a project. It is deploying an irresponsible power dynamic.
Sequencing violations should have consequences. The Steering Forum, Chief AI Officer, General Counsel, Ethics function, and Board should be empowered to suspend pilots, vendor access, model deployment, or data access when FILE⁷ dependencies are bypassed.
9. First Eight Moves
The First Eight Moves give CEOs an immediate entry point without bypassing phase gates.
- Begin the CEO embodiment journal before any other activation move. The CEO’s formation is the prerequisite for organizational activation. An executive who begins the roadmap before honestly engaging with the question “What kind of leader do I need to become?” has made FILE⁷ into a project management initiative rather than a leadership discipline.
- Draft the FILE⁷ intent statement. Clarify purpose before action.
- Convene a small initial FILE⁷ core group. Include the CEO, CHRO, Chief AI Officer or CTO, Legal or Ethics, and one operational leader.
- Identify one high-risk AI-mediated workflow. Begin understanding where judgment is already at risk.
- Begin stakeholder legitimacy listening with frontline employees. Legitimacy precedes design.
- Ask regional leaders where cultural translation will be required. Prevent Western-centric rollout.
- Identify one decision the CEO will personally make using FILE⁷ principles in the first 30 days. The framework must shape an actual decision, not only a plan.
- Schedule the Day 30 phase-gate review. Activation requires discipline, not momentum.
These moves establish the foundation for FILE⁷ activation by anchoring the CEO’s identity, clarifying purpose, building the core team, identifying risk, creating legitimacy, preventing cultural blindness, and enforcing discipline.
These are not shortcuts. They are the first moves of disciplined activation.
10. Phase 1 — Days 1–30: Diagnose and Stabilize
Philosophical anchor: The first act of FILE⁷ leadership is restraint: the discipline to see clearly before acting visibly.
Phase 1 creates situational awareness before action. It asks the CEO to resist the temptation to perform decisiveness before the organization understands its risks, maturity, AI exposure, stakeholder legitimacy, and cultural context.
1. Declare the FILE⁷ Intent
The CEO explains that FILE⁷ is not AI adoption for its own sake, not productivity maximization, not another transformation program, but human-centered augmented leadership.
2. Conduct a FILE⁷ Maturity Baseline
The maturity baseline assesses the seven Es as a diagnostic mirror, not a prestige scorecard. Its purpose is to reveal where FILE⁷ is already present, where it is weak, and where the organization may be confusing activity with development.
- Evolution: Is the organization revising assumptions, or defending them?
- Effectiveness: Are outcomes improving in ways that matter to people, or only in ways that are easy to count?
- Excellence: Are judgment, rigor, and ethical discipline visible in actual practice?
- Ecosystems: Are external stakeholders recognized as part of the system, or treated as afterthoughts?
- Empowerment: Is agency expanding, or are people becoming more dependent on systems and directives?
- Execution: Are principles becoming repeatable routines, or remaining aspirational language?
- Embodiment: Do leaders act consistently under pressure, or only when conditions are easy?
A baseline at Day 30 is directional, not definitive. It can show patterns, risks, and gaps, but it cannot prove maturity.
3. Map AI Exposure and AI Capture Risks
The AI exposure map identifies where AI influences decisions, where humans ratify machine outputs, where judgment may be displaced, where AI governance is absent, where AI could intensify instrumentalization, and where algorithmic techno-colonialism or cultural bias may appear.
The map should combine technical discovery with behavioral mapping. Some AI exposure is visible in systems, vendors, dashboards, and workflows. Some is hidden in everyday habits: copied AI outputs, informal automation, predictive dashboards, ranking tools, language defaults, and decision shortcuts that no one calls “governance.”
4. Identify Organizational Operating-System Gaps
The CEO assesses governance forums, rituals, decision rights, workflow architecture, stakeholder channels, and learning loops. This assessment shows whether the organization has the structures needed to make FILE⁷ real.
5. Conduct Stakeholder Legitimacy Listening
Stakeholder legitimacy listening must begin in the first 30 days — before pilots, before global rollout, and before major FILE⁷ communication. This is not a courtesy. It is a structural necessity.
Labor voice is non-negotiable. Employees and frontline workers must have a seat at the table because they are most affected by AI-mediated workflows. Stakeholders include employees, frontline workers, managers, team leads, unions or works councils where relevant, customers, end-users, communities, regulators, AI users, affected stakeholders, and regional leaders.
Psychological safety is essential. Listening cannot be legitimate if employees believe that dissent will be punished, ignored, or used against them. Affected stakeholders must have a formal mechanism to log structural friction, and that input should populate the Phase 1 risk register.
If stakeholder listening occurs only after design decisions have already been made, it becomes stakeholder theater: a performative ritual that legitimizes predetermined outcomes rather than shaping them.
6. Start Cultural Translation Review
Using Paper 9, the CEO asks: where are we applying universal language too quickly? Which regions or cultures require translation before activation? Who has local legitimacy? Who has not been heard? Where might our assumptions about authority, transparency, accountability, or empowerment be culturally narrow?
What to Resist in the First 30 Days
The CEO should resist announcing a full FILE⁷ transformation before the maturity baseline is complete; launching AI governance committees before the AI exposure map exists; beginning global rollout before cultural translation is assessed; communicating major external commitments before internal governance exists; delegating FILE⁷ activation before personal embodiment begins; and selecting pilots before stakeholder legitimacy is understood.
Premature action in the first 30 days is not decisiveness. It is often avoidance of the harder discipline diagnosis requires: the willingness to sit with organizational reality honestly enough to understand what it reveals. The CEO who announces transformation before understanding the organization’s reality has made a communication decision rather than a governance one — and the organization will recognize the difference.
No pilot selection before stakeholder legitimacy mapping.
Minimum Viable Activation by Day 30
- FILE⁷ intent statement;
- maturity baseline;
- AI exposure map;
- stakeholder legitimacy map;
- organizational OS gap analysis;
- cultural translation risk map;
- CEO embodiment reflection.
Phase 1 failure signal: The CEO is moving too fast to look decisive.
11. Phase 2 — Days 31–60: Design and Mobilize
Philosophical anchor: Design is not control. In FILE⁷, design is the disciplined creation of conditions under which human agency can survive execution.
Phase 2 moves from diagnosis to design. The purpose is not to launch transformation quickly, but to build the governance, rituals, workflows, resources, and leadership formation conditions that make responsible execution possible.
1. Create the FILE⁷ Steering Forum
The FILE⁷ Steering Forum is the governance body that ensures FILE⁷’s principles are translated into practice with accountability, legitimacy, and pluralism.
It should include the CEO, CHRO, Chief AI Officer or CTO, strategy, operations, legal, ethics, employee representation, regional leaders, and cultural translation representatives.
Employee representation is non-negotiable. Workers must have formal voice in the Steering Forum to protect dignity, agency, and contestability. Without this, FILE⁷ risks becoming another top-down initiative that ignores the very people it aims to empower.
Regional leaders are non-negotiable. They ensure that FILE⁷ is culturally translated and locally legitimate, not imposed as a Western export model. Regional leaders understand local norms, power dynamics, and institutional contexts that headquarters may overlook.
A FILE⁷ Steering Forum without employee voice and cultural translation authority will reproduce the very centralization FILE⁷ is designed to correct.
2. Define the FILE⁷ Ethical Kernel
The ethical kernel defines FILE⁷’s non-negotiables: dignity, agency, accountability, contestability, non-instrumentalization, human-AI judgment, and protection from AI Capture. The kernel must be clear before workflow redesign begins. Otherwise, execution will optimize without knowing what it must protect.
3. Design First Human-AI Workflow Interventions
Select two or three high-impact workflows where AI affects decisions. Redesign them around human judgment checkpoints, contestability, transparency, accountability, escalation, and learning loops.
Workflow redesign must include hardcoded interruption gates: points in the automated workflow where a machine cannot execute or finalize a consequential decision unless a human actor verifies data provenance, reviews context, and signs off using an independent judgment protocol.
No workflow redesign without human judgment checkpoints.
4. Build the FILE⁷ Ritual System
Create recurring rituals such as weekly human-AI judgment review, monthly AI governance forum, stakeholder legitimacy review, leadership embodiment reflection, execution learning loop, and cultural translation checkpoint. FILE⁷ becomes real when it enters the repeatable rhythm of organizational life.
5. Select First FILE⁷ Pilots
Pilots should be visible enough to matter, contained enough to learn, ethically significant, cross-functional, and culturally translatable.
| Pilot criterion | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Visible enough to matter | Demonstrates that FILE⁷ is not symbolic |
| Contained enough to learn | Limits risk while generating evidence |
| Ethically significant | Tests FILE⁷ where dignity, agency, or judgment are at stake |
| Cross-functional | Shows whether FILE⁷ can coordinate across silos |
| Culturally translatable | Prepares for responsible scaling beyond one context |
6. Mobilize Leadership Formation
Use Paper 8 to begin MLT-inspired leadership formation: AI literacy, judgment under pressure, cultural translation, political intelligence, emotional intelligence, and embodiment practice.
7. Align Resources
The CFO must be involved early. FILE⁷ requires investment in governance, formation, translation, AI oversight, stakeholder listening, and learning loops. If resources are allocated only to technology deployment and not to human capability and governance, FILE⁷ becomes AI acceleration with ethical language attached.
Minimum Viable Activation by Day 60
- Steering Forum charter;
- ethical kernel statement;
- workflow redesign plan;
- ritual calendar;
- pilot portfolio;
- leadership formation plan;
- cultural translation governance plan;
- initial resource allocation plan.
Phase 2 failure signal: The organization is designing structures faster than it is creating legitimacy.
12. Phase 3 — Days 61–90: Execute and Anchor
Philosophical anchor: Execution is not acceleration. Execution is the disciplined translation of intent into governed practice.
Phase 3 moves from design to disciplined activation. It launches the first FILE⁷ pilots, activates AI governance, begins maturity review, and anchors the next 12-month roadmap. It does not declare transformation complete.
1. Launch FILE⁷ Pilots
Each pilot must include human-AI workflow redesign, stakeholder voice, ethical kernel alignment, maturity indicators, AI Capture protection, escalation, and contestability. The pilot is not proof of success. It is a learning environment.
2. Activate AI Governance Mechanisms
Implement AI decision accountability, human oversight, model-risk escalation, contestability channels, audit loops, and human judgment preservation. If AI governance begins after implementation, it is already late.
3. Run First Maturity Review
The Day 90 maturity review compares baseline versus progress, early signals, risks, failures, and learning. It asks whether FILE⁷ has started to change judgment, governance, power, and behavior in visible ways.
Day 90 is not proof of transformation. It is the first maturity gate.
4. Hold the CEO Embodiment Review
The CEO Embodiment Review is not a performance evaluation. It is a moral audit. The CEO asks: where did I model FILE⁷? Where did I delegate too quickly? Where did I avoid difficult conversations? Where did I privilege speed over legitimacy? Where did I protect human agency? Where did my behavior contradict the commitments I asked others to honor?
This review must be honest, specific, and actionable. If the CEO cannot name concrete examples of where they succeeded or failed, the review is performative.
5. Conduct Failure-Mode Review
Before the organization scales anything, it must review the failure modes named later in this paper: delegation theater, embodiment theater, governance theater, formation amnesia, speed theater, AI-washing, instrumentalization, maturity theater, translation theater, and stakeholder theater.
No scaling before the first maturity review.
6. Institutionalize Learning Loops
Create mechanisms for feedback, adaptation, stakeholder review, AI governance learning, cross-cultural translation, and leadership formation.
7. Define the Next 12-Month FILE⁷ Roadmap
The 90 days end with a trajectory, not a declaration of success.
Minimum Viable Activation by Day 90
- at least one FILE⁷ pilot launched;
- AI governance forum active;
- human judgment checkpoints installed in priority workflows;
- stakeholder feedback synthesized;
- cultural translation mechanism activated where needed;
- CEO embodiment review completed;
- failure-mode review completed;
- next 12-month roadmap drafted.
Phase 3 failure signal: The organization declares success before power, behavior, and governance have changed.
13. Execution–Embodiment Convergence Matrix
An augmented organization cannot function if the structural operating system is decoupled from the personal behaviors of the leaders who run it. Every structural intervention must trigger a corresponding behavioral choice from leadership, supported by a defensive safeguard from the Praxis Threshold Toolkit.
| Phase | Operational intervention | Leadership response | Defensive safeguard | Evidence signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Map AI exposure and shadow AI usage | Practice cognitive restraint; refuse to ratify unexamined automated outputs | Protects against AI Capture | Un-governed dashboards, models, or decision tools are identified and paused or brought under governance |
| Phase 1 | Conduct stakeholder legitimacy listening | Practice humility before affected voices; change plans when listening reveals inadequacy | Protects against instrumentalization | Stakeholder feedback produces visible changes in roadmap design |
| Phase 2 | Build translation boards and local interface layers | Practice civilizational humility; accept local variation | Protects against civilizational narrowing | Regional actors receive authority to modify or pause rollout |
| Phase 2 | Design human-AI workflow guardrails | Practice accountability before efficiency | Protects against AI Capture and instrumentalization | Human judgment checkpoints are installed before deployment |
| Phase 3 | Distribute decision and veto rights | Shift from centralized command to multi-stakeholder stewardship | Protects against instrumentalization | Employee representatives, regional leaders, or governance bodies can pause harmful implementation |
| Phase 3 | Hold CEO embodiment review | Submit personal behavior to FILE⁷ scrutiny | Protects against performative embodiment | CEO names concrete decisions where they succeeded, failed, and revised behavior |
This matrix ensures that execution and embodiment evolve together. Without it, organizations risk creating all the right structures with none of the right substance.
14. AI Governance in the First 90 Days
AI governance cannot be treated as a late-stage compliance audit or defensive legal function. It must be an active structural constraint embedded into the first phase of the activation sequence.
If AI governance begins after implementation, it is already late.
The CEO must answer six critical questions in the first 30 days:
- Where is AI already shaping, filtering, or determining organizational decisions?
- Who is the specific human actor accountable for AI-mediated outcomes in each workflow?
- Can affected employees, customers, and partners contest automated outputs through visible, protected channels?
- Are humans preserving independent judgment or rubber-stamping machine-generated recommendations?
- What data architectures, models, vendors, and platforms are shaping corporate decisions?
- Are global operations exposed to algorithmic techno-colonialism through monocultural AI deployment?
The organization must complete eight actions before Day 90:
- AI exposure mapping: document every algorithm, automated model, and generative system modifying organizational data or workflows.
- Risk classification: categorize AI systems according to their impact on dignity, agency, safety, legality, and accountability.
- Accountability assignment: map every active AI system to a specific accountable human actor.
- Contestability channels: create protected channels allowing employees and affected stakeholders to challenge automated outputs.
- Human judgment checkpoints: require human review before high-stakes algorithmic recommendations are approved.
- Vendor transparency review: demand documentation on training data, model limitations, bias risks, and governance obligations.
- Cultural bias review: verify that deployed models do not impose a single language, cultural viewpoint, or management style across regions.
- AI Governance Forum activation: establish a body with authority to pause, revise, or deactivate AI systems that fail ethical validation.
AI Governance Red Flags
- No human accountable for AI-driven decisions.
- Contestability channels exist on paper only.
- AI recommendations are rarely challenged.
- Vendor transparency is lacking.
- Cultural bias is unaddressed.
- Human oversight is optional rather than mandatory.
Vendor Accountability Checklist
- Training data is auditable and bias-tested.
- Model limitations are documented and disclosed.
- Human oversight is mandatory, not optional.
- Contestability is built into the contract.
- Local adaptation is supported by the vendor.
- Suspension rights exist if the vendor system violates FILE⁷ principles.
This section operationalizes Paper 6, converts Paper 4’s AI Capture risk into guardrails, and enforces Paper 9’s mandate that technology platforms respect local socio-technical realities.
15. Cultural Translation Before Global Rollout
No FILE⁷ rollout should be global before it has been translated locally.
This is not a recommendation. It is a non-negotiable condition for responsible practice. Cultural translation is not localization, branding, or superficial adaptation. It is the disciplined work of ensuring that FILE⁷’s universal principles — human dignity, agency, contestability, accountability, and empowerment — are embodied in ways that are legitimate, coherent, and empowering within each cultural, institutional, and civilizational context.
Before global deployment, the CEO must ensure the following actions have been completed:
- Cultural assumption audit: identify hidden assumptions about individualism, hierarchy, transparency, accountability, voice, or speed.
- Local stakeholder dialogue: include employees, unions or works councils, community representatives, cultural interpreters, regional leaders, and affected stakeholders.
- Non-negotiable kernel mapping: clarify which FILE⁷ principles are universal and which expressions must be adapted locally.
- Local interface design: adapt FILE⁷ tools, rituals, workflows, and governance forums to local institutional realities.
- Institutional fit review: align with local laws, labor systems, governance norms, public expectations, and cultural legitimacy.
- Translation governance charter: formalize who has authority over FILE⁷ translation and how disputes will be resolved.
- Epistemic veto mechanism: give legitimate local actors the right to pause, challenge, or revise implementation.
- Local pilot and feedback: test FILE⁷ in a controlled local context before scaling.
What Is an Epistemic Veto?
An epistemic veto is the right of local stakeholders to pause or revise a decision, policy, system, or rollout if it violates local norms, threatens human dignity or agency, ignores cultural realities, or imposes centralized assumptions under the guise of universality.
Epistemic veto rights must be held not only by local executives, but by legitimate local actors, including workers, unions, affected stakeholders, regional leaders, and institutions with local trust.
Cultural Translation Checklist
- cultural assumption audit completed;
- local stakeholder dialogue conducted;
- least powerful affected actors included;
- non-negotiable principles mapped locally;
- local governance mechanisms integrated;
- pilot and feedback loop designed for one region or team;
- local veto or pause mechanism established.
A CEO who applies FILE⁷ without cultural translation may execute quickly, but not responsibly.
Speed without legitimacy is not just ineffective. It is instrumentalization in disguise. FILE⁷’s global success depends on local authenticity — and that requires time, dialogue, and power-sharing.
16. Sovereignty Friction: Board, CHRO, Chief AI Officer, and Executive Team Roles
The CEO owns FILE⁷ activation, but executive authority is not absolute. FILE⁷ requires constructive friction — checks, balances, and distributed responsibility — to prevent centralization, instrumentalization, and AI Capture.
If a CEO operates with unchecked authority over human-AI infrastructure, the system will naturally drift toward automation speed and short-term efficiency, overriding human protections.
| Role | Responsibility | Friction / safeguard |
|---|---|---|
| Board | Oversight of long-term legitimacy, AI risk, ethical risk, and stakeholder accountability | Can slow or halt unsafe technological acceleration |
| CEO | Sponsorship, stewardship, embodiment, and systemic orchestration | Accountable to the Board, Steering Forum, stakeholders, and ethical kernel |
| CHRO | Leadership formation, culture, psychological safety, and employee voice | Challenges performative leadership and monitors workforce impact |
| Chief AI Officer / CTO | AI exposure, vendors, technical architecture, model risk, and workflow design | Can declare an automated workflow unsafe and halt deployment |
| COO | Execution discipline, workflow redesign, and operational routines | Ensures FILE⁷ becomes operational rather than symbolic |
| General Counsel / Ethics | Accountability, contestability, compliance, rights, and ethical safeguards | Can block deployments that violate rights, law, or dignity |
| Regional Leaders | Cultural translation, local legitimacy, and institutional fit | Can challenge global uniformity and activate epistemic veto |
| Employee Representatives | Worker voice, contestability, dignity, and frontline experience | Can contest harmful workflows and algorithmic management systems |
| CFO | Resource alignment and investment discipline | Must fund formation, governance, and translation without reducing FILE⁷ to ROI |
Employee representatives are not symbolic. They are the frontline defense against instrumentalization, AI Capture, and performative embodiment. Without their formal voice and veto power, FILE⁷ risks becoming another tool of managerial control — the very opposite of its purpose.
Regional leaders are not implementation relays. They protect local legitimacy and cultural translation.
The CFO must align resources with FILE⁷’s principles but cannot reduce FILE⁷ to a cost-benefit analysis. Formation, governance, and cultural translation require investment, not just efficiency.
The CEO owns FILE⁷ activation, but the organization must distribute responsibility through governance.
17. The FILE⁷ Rhythm: A CEO’s Weekly Discipline
FILE⁷ becomes real when it enters the CEO’s calendar. The following rhythm is not a rigid calendar template. It is a discipline of attention that reminds the CEO what must remain visible every week.
| Weekly rhythm | Purpose | Key question |
|---|---|---|
| Monday: Execution alignment | Review FILE⁷ priorities and human-AI workflows | Are we expanding or contracting agency? |
| Tuesday: Stakeholder legitimacy | Listen to employees, customers, or affected users | Who is affected by our decisions? |
| Wednesday: AI governance check | Review AI risks and escalations | Where are humans rubber-stamping machines? |
| Thursday: Leadership formation | Work with executive team on embodiment and judgment | How did I model FILE⁷ this week? |
| Friday: Learning loop | Review what changed and what failed | What must we revise? |
| Weekend or protected reflection time | Integrate embodiment and learning privately | What kind of leader am I becoming? |
This rhythm ensures that FILE⁷ remains a living practice, not a one-time initiative. By reinforcing execution, embodiment, governance, stakeholder legitimacy, and learning every week, the CEO prevents drift and sustains momentum.
18. Safeguarding the Roadmap: Failure Modes, Evidence, and Anti-Theater Metrics
The 90-day roadmap is not immune to the failure modes it is designed to prevent. Every protocol, ritual, and governance mechanism can become the form of the practice it describes without its substance.
| Failure mode | Warning sign | Correction |
|---|---|---|
| Delegation Theater | CEO delegates FILE⁷ entirely to HR, IT, strategy, consultants, or transformation teams | Require CEO-owned reviews, visible sponsorship, and direct embodiment practices |
| Embodiment Theater | Leaders speak FILE⁷ language without changing behavior under pressure | Use behavioral observation, reflection, and pressure-tested review |
| Governance Theater | New governance bodies exist, but they cannot alter decisions | Require documented decision authority, escalation power, and audit follow-through |
| Formation Amnesia | Day 90 arrives and formation practices stop | Write the CEO Embodiment Contract, monthly embodiment reviews, and weekly learning loops into the permanent executive calendar before Day 90 can be declared a gate passage |
| Speed Theater | The organization moves quickly to look decisive, but legitimacy is weak | Slow rollout where needed; require stakeholder and governance checks |
| AI-Washing | AI governance exists on paper but not in actual decision practice | Require contestability usage, human judgment checkpoints, and audit trails |
| Instrumentalization | FILE⁷ is used to increase productivity while agency declines | Track empowerment, workload, and human override alongside output |
| Maturity Theater | Dashboard improves but behavior does not | Combine metrics with qualitative evidence and frontline feedback |
| Translation Theater | Local examples are added, but power remains centralized | Require local ownership, local dissent, and local decision influence |
| Stakeholder Theater | Listening sessions occur, but feedback changes nothing | Require visible decision changes based on stakeholder input |
If the 90-day review measures activity but not changed judgment, governance, power, and behavior, it has measured theater.
Substance vs. Form
| Form | Substance |
|---|---|
| Checklists completed | Judgment improved |
| Committees formed | Decisions changed |
| Training attended | Behavior adapted |
| Policies written | Power redistributed |
| Metrics improved | Trust increased |
Evidence Limits
The first 90 days can show whether the organization has begun FILE⁷ responsibly. They cannot prove FILE⁷ maturity.
- 90-day evidence is early, directional, and incomplete.
- Activity is not transformation.
- Adoption is not legitimacy.
- Dashboard progress is not changed behavior.
- CEO intent is not institutional embodiment.
- Pilot success is not system maturity.
- Stakeholder listening is not stakeholder power unless feedback changes decisions.
19. The FILE⁷ Activation Tracker and Minimum Viable FILE⁷
The tracker summarizes deliverables without replacing judgment. It is a coordination tool, not proof of success.
| Timing | Deliverable | Purpose | Related paper |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 30 | FILE⁷ intent statement | Establish clear purpose and leadership commitment | Paper 1 |
| Day 30 | Maturity baseline | Identify starting conditions across the seven Es | Paper 5 |
| Day 30 | AI exposure map | Reveal where AI already shapes decisions and risks | Papers 4 and 6 |
| Day 30 | Stakeholder legitimacy map | Identify who is affected and whose voice is missing | Papers 6, 7, and 9 |
| Day 30 | Cultural translation risk map | Flag where implementation requires local adaptation | Paper 9 |
| Day 60 | Steering Forum charter | Establish governance ownership and authority | Papers 6 and 7 |
| Day 60 | Ethical kernel statement | Define the non-negotiable core of FILE⁷ practice | Papers 1, 4, and 9 |
| Day 60 | Workflow redesign plan | Begin converting principles into practice | Paper 2 |
| Day 60 | Ritual calendar | Create recurring structures for learning and accountability | Paper 7 |
| Day 60–90 | Translation governance charter | Give local actors authority to pause, revise, or adapt rollout | Paper 9 |
| Day 60 | Leadership formation plan | Begin forming the CEO and executive team in FILE⁷ practice | Papers 3 and 8 |
| Day 90 | Pilot launch report | Document what was activated and what was learned | Papers 2, 6, and 7 |
| Day 90 | AI governance activation report | Show whether governance is functioning in practice | Paper 6 |
| Day 90 | Maturity progress review | Compare baseline and early signals | Paper 5 |
| Day 90 | CEO embodiment reflection | Record what changed in leadership behavior | Paper 3 |
| Day 90 | Stakeholder feedback synthesis | Show whether others recognize meaningful change | Papers 6, 7, and 9 |
| Day 90 | Next 12-month roadmap | Establish continuation path beyond the first cycle | Paper 10 |
The tracker supports judgment. It must not replace judgment.
Minimum Viable FILE⁷ by Day 90
- a clear FILE⁷ intent statement;
- a baseline maturity assessment;
- an AI exposure and AI Capture map;
- a functioning governance forum;
- at least one redesigned human-AI workflow pilot;
- stakeholder legitimacy listening;
- cultural translation review where needed;
- CEO embodiment practice;
- failure-mode review;
- a 12-month continuation roadmap.
This minimum viable FILE⁷ does not prove transformation. It proves only that the organization has created credible conditions for responsible continuation.
If any of the seven checks fail — maturity, AI governance, human-AI workflows, stakeholder legitimacy, cultural translation, embodiment, or failure modes — the CEO must pause the roadmap.
Governing question: Has the CEO created the conditions for FILE⁷ to become governed, embodied, translated, and executable beyond personal intention?
20. From 90 Days to 12 Months
The completion of the 90-day roadmap does not represent the end of transformation. It represents the initial configuration of the operating core.
A leadership team that treats the end of the third month as a finish line introduces the risk of false closure. It signals that transformation is complete, causing the organization to relax vigilance and slide back into legacy habits.
Day 90 is not the finish line. It is the first maturity gate.
| Maturity gate criterion | How it is assessed | Who validates? |
|---|---|---|
| Governance is functioning | Forums have decision rights, escalation power, and audit follow-through | Steering Forum and Board |
| Embodiment is visible | CEO and executive team can name behavior changes under pressure | Steering Forum, CHRO, employee representatives |
| Stakeholders have voice | Feedback has led to visible decision changes | Employee representatives and regional leaders |
| Cultural translation is underway | Local adaptation is documented and validated | Regional leaders and cultural translation representatives |
| Pilots are learning | Lessons are documented, acted upon, and connected to maturity review | Steering Forum |
Post-90-day priorities include scaling successful pilots, deepening AI governance, institutionalizing rituals, expanding leadership formation, strengthening cultural translation, repeating maturity assessments, revising governance parameters, publishing internal learning reports, and preparing the next strategic cycle.
By approaching the post-90-day horizon with discipline, the CEO avoids performative closure and develops a sustainable, self-correcting operating model where augmented leadership can evolve as a durable, human-centered practice.
21. Public-Sector and Institutional Applicability
The principles of FILE⁷ — human dignity, agency, contestability, accountability, and empowerment — are not corporate principles. They are human ones. Any institutional context in which human beings work within AI-mediated systems is a context in which FILE⁷’s governance commitments apply.
Although this paper uses the term CEO, it is not limited to corporate CEOs. “CEO” is shorthand for executive authority: the responsibility to govern human-AI systems, institutional legitimacy, stakeholder relationships, and power.
The FILE⁷ activation logic applies wherever leaders shape the conditions under which AI and human judgment interact. It can be adapted for public-sector leaders, university presidents, heads of international organizations, hospital directors, nonprofit leaders, school leaders, public agencies, and cultural institutions.
| Sector | FILE⁷ focus | Example action |
|---|---|---|
| Public sector | Transparency, accountability, citizen trust | Public AI governance forums with citizen representation |
| Universities | Academic freedom, student dignity, ethical AI | Faculty-led AI ethics review boards |
| International organizations | Pluralism, global legitimacy, cultural humility | Regional translation councils for AI policies |
| Hospitals | Patient dignity, consent, safety | Patient advisory boards for AI diagnostics |
| Nonprofits | Mission alignment, social impact, stakeholder voice | Beneficiary-led AI design workshops |
| Schools | Student privacy, equity, human-centered learning | Student and teacher AI ethics councils |
| Public agencies | Regulatory compliance, public trust, contestability | Public comment periods for AI deployments |
| Cultural institutions | Artistic integrity, diversity, human creativity | Artist-led AI curation committees |
The principles remain the same. Their expression must be adapted to each institutional context.
22. Conclusion — From Arc 4 to FILE⁷ Praxis
Arc 4 began with the Threshold of Praxis — the recognition that FILE⁷, having reached theoretical maturity across three arcs of development, faced its hardest test: entry into the world.
The theory named four dangers at that threshold: the risk that a framework of empowerment becomes a more sophisticated instrument of control; that embodiment becomes performance; that augmentation becomes capture; and that universal aspiration becomes civilizational imposition.
The arc then built the architecture for navigating those dangers: an execution engine, an embodied leader model, a protective toolkit, a maturity model, an AI governance architecture, an organizational operating system, an educational paradigm, a cultural translation framework, and now a CEO playbook.
Paper 10 does what the arc promised: it hands that architecture to the leader who must activate it.
The handover is not without conditions. The CEO who receives this playbook receives an architecture, not a guarantee. What the architecture requires is not only technical competence, but a specific kind of leadership formation: the willingness to be the first test of whether FILE⁷ is real; the willingness to submit one’s own behavior to the same scrutiny required of organizational systems; the willingness to begin a multi-year developmental journey in the first 90 days rather than complete a transformation program within them.
The corpus through which this architecture was built was itself a demonstration of what it describes. Forty papers, co-created by Guillaume Mariani and six artificial intelligences, across four arcs of progressive intellectual development — this is what augmented leadership looks like at the level of a theoretical project: human intelligence holding sovereignty over purpose, meaning, and normative direction while AI intelligences contribute their specific strengths in synthesis, systems architecture, institutional analysis, operational design, and measurement discipline.
The medium was the message. The process was the first proof.
But the proof that matters most is not in the corpus. It is in what leaders, organizations, educators, and institutions decide to do when they encounter it. A theory that remains in papers, however carefully constructed and honestly reviewed, has not yet crossed the threshold that the first paper of this arc named.
It becomes real only when it changes what a specific leader does in a specific organization, in a specific cultural context, under the specific pressures that reveal whether the framework governs judgment or merely decorates communication.
FILE⁷ does not end with Paper 10. It begins with the leaders who receive it and decide whether to practice it — not in the conditions that make practice easy, but in the conditions that make practice matter. Not when AI governance is convenient, but when it slows execution. Not when cultural translation adds legitimacy, but when it complicates global scale. Not when embodiment is recognized and rewarded, but when it is privately costly and institutionally invisible.
The governing question with which Arc 4 closes is the question every genuine leadership framework must eventually place before the leaders who encounter it:
Has the CEO created the conditions for FILE⁷ to become governed, embodied, translated, and executable beyond personal intention?
Not only beyond this individual’s tenure. Not only beyond this transformation initiative’s lifecycle. Beyond the personal intention of any single leader — embedded in governance, rituals, decision rights, cultural translation, and organizational learning.
That is what institutionalization means. Not policy adoption. Not program completion. The creation of conditions under which the ethical commitments of augmented leadership survive the human fallibility of the leaders who hold them.
FILE⁷ began as a framework for understanding what leadership requires in the age of artificial intelligence. Across forty papers and four arcs, it became a theory of praxis, execution, embodiment, governance, maturity, organization, education, cultural translation, and executive activation.
The world does not need more leaders who admire FILE⁷. It needs leaders who practice it.
Paper 10 does not end FILE⁷. It hands FILE⁷ back to leaders, organizations, educators, and institutions with one question:
Will you merely admire the architecture, or will you have the courage to practice it?
The answer is not in these pages.
It is in what comes next.
About the Author
Guillaume Mariani is the author, creator, inventor, and originator of FILE: The Five Intelligences of Leadership Evolution. This article was developed through an extended dialogue between Guillaume Mariani, ChatGPT (OpenAI) and Copilot (Microsoft), with contributions from Claude (Anthropic), Gemini (Google), Le Chat (Mistral AI), and Perplexity (Perplexity AI). In the spirit of the framework itself — which argues for productive collaboration between human and artificial intelligence — the article is presented as a co-authored work: the framework, its conceptual architecture, and its core arguments originate with Guillaume Mariani; the elaboration, academic scaffolding, and written expression were developed in collaboration with ChatGPT (OpenAI) and Copilot (Microsoft) in May 2026.
The Five Intelligences of Leadership Evolution is the subject of ongoing research and will be developed further in subsequent publications.
Leadership = AI + EQ + CQ + PQ + AQ
© Guillaume Mariani, 2026. Co-authored with ChatGPT (OpenAI) and Copilot (Microsoft). With contributions from Claude (Anthropic), Gemini (Google), Le Chat (Mistral AI), and Perplexity (Perplexity AI).