April 10, 2026
There’s a moment most leaders know.
Someone sends you a draft — a social post, a newsletter, a pitch document — and they say let me know what you think. And you think: I don’t have time for this. And then you do it anyway. Because the last time you didn’t, something went out that made you wince.
That moment has a name. Decision drag. And it’s one of the clearest signals that a communications system is missing the piece that would make it actually work.
This is what The Narrative Advantage is back to talk about — and what the BRIDGE Framework was built to fix.
For a long time, the most common thing I heard from clients on both the production and consulting side was some version of the same sentence: I just don’t have the time. I wish I had another person. Capacity. Always capacity.
Then AI arrived. And instead of confirming the capacity answer, it complicated it.
If the tools now exist to move faster, to draft more, to produce more — and organisations are still stuck — then the problem isn’t output volume. Something upstream is broken. The faster you go without fixing that, the more noise you generate and the more decisions route back to the top.
That’s when the question shifted from how do we create more? to why isn’t what we’re creating working the way it should?
The answer, almost every time, was the same. There was no framework holding the communications together. No decision gates. No documented standard for what “good” looks like. No process through which things move from idea to output without touching the founder’s desk twice.
Here’s the thing about a newsroom: it is not a creative free-for-all. It is one of the most process-driven environments ever built.
Every role has a description. Every piece of content moves through a defined set of decision gates before it reaches an audience. A producer running sixteen newscasts a day doesn’t check in with a manager before each one — because the standard is already internalised. The decision gates are already built. The question “is this good enough?” has a documented answer that lives in the system, not in one person’s head.
That’s what organisations keep asking for when they say they want to communicate like a newsroom. They don’t want cameras and lower thirds. They want that operational clarity. The ability to move from idea to output with confidence, consistency, and without the whole thing collapsing the moment the person at the top steps away from the approval queue.
The BRIDGE Framework is the answer to that ask.
BRIDGE is a six-pillar communications infrastructure system. Each pillar addresses a specific place where organisational communications tend to break down — and the order is deliberate, because each one depends on what comes before it.
B — Brief. Before anything gets created or sent, three questions need an answer: what are we saying, who are we saying it to, and why does it need to be said right now? A brief is a mental gate, not a form. When it’s missing, content goes out because it’s Tuesday, not because it serves a purpose.
R — Rhythm. Once you know what you’re saying and to whom, the next question is how often you need to show up to achieve your goal. Rhythm isn’t the same across every channel — and once you define it, you also understand your actual workload. That’s when the infrastructure conversation becomes real.
I — Infrastructure. The people, technology, and AI systems that enable the rhythm. The most common infrastructure mistake is using a tool for something it wasn’t designed to do — and then blaming the team for the results. This is almost never a people problem. It’s a systems mismatch.
D — Distribution. Where execution happens. Getting the right message to the right audience through the cleanest possible channel. Distribution fails when the three pillars before it aren’t solid — which is how you end up working hard and getting nowhere.
G — Governance. Who owns creating it, reviewing it, and approving it. And critically: what can ship without a sign-off at all? Governance is the pillar that removes the founder from the production line. When it’s clear, the team gains confidence. When it’s missing, everything routes back to the top.
E — Escalation. The break-glass plan. What happens when something goes wrong — something ships that shouldn’t have, the industry has a public moment that requires a response, a comment thread starts moving in the wrong direction. Nobody builds this until they need it. By then it’s too late.
There’s a specific way governance failures tend to look in small organisations. The founder — or the leadership group — becomes structurally necessary at almost every stage of the communications process. Not because they want to be there. Because nothing has been defined well enough for anyone else to hold the standard without them.
This isn’t a bottleneck in the traditional sense. A bottleneck you can work around. This is a retaining wall. The whole structure relies on that person bearing the weight. Remove them from any point in the chain and things get wobbly.
The practical result is five to seven hours a week — sometimes ten — spent on review, rewrites, and informal approvals that never show up on any timesheet. The let me know what you think messages. The last-minute revisions. The decisions that technically belong to someone else but keep landing where they always do.
That’s not a workload problem. That’s a governance failure dressed up as one.
When an organisation builds out its BRIDGE infrastructure, a few things shift in sequence.
First, the team gains a shared language for diagnosing problems. Instead of “the social media isn’t working” or “the team isn’t delivering,” there’s now a way to locate the actual failure. Which pillar? Which decision gate? That specificity alone changes the quality of the conversation.
Second, the team gains the confidence to act. When good is documented and decision rights are clear, people stop asking permission for things that don’t need it. The question moves from is this okay? to this meets our standard — and that shift in language represents a real change in how the organisation operates.
Third, the leader gets their time back. Not because they stopped caring about quality. Because quality finally has a definition that lives somewhere other than their head.
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