It’s easy to believe that architecture is about solving “our” problems.
But no project exists in isolation.
Myth 15: “Internal priorities are all that matter.”
This myth is dangerous because it blinds teams to outside forces.
Yes, internal priorities matter.
But ignoring external constraints can undo months of work.
I’ve seen it first-hand:
👉 A payment system was designed only around internal goals.
Midway through, new security regulations were enforced.
The system had to be redesigned — doubling costs and delaying rollout.
The QTAM Difference
The Quick Technical Architecture Method (QTAM) makes external factors explicit.
- Regulations, compliance, and legal requirements
- Partner and vendor needs
- Market and customer expectations
- Broader ecosystem dependencies
By capturing these early, QTAM ensures that your architecture work is grounded in reality — not just internal wish lists.
Why It Matters
Projects succeed when they:
- Balance internal goals with external demands
- Anticipate regulatory changes
- Account for partner and ecosystem needs
When external factors are ignored, redesigns and delays are almost guaranteed.
Take the Next Step
Don’t build in a bubble.
👉 See how QTAM helps you integrate external factors early at qtam.morin.io
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