<p>Roland and J-M go solo to pull back the curtain on something that's been years in the making: <a href="https://bpm-os.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">BPM OS</a>, a purpose-built, local-first tool stack designed to help small, talented process and architecture teams stand up a real BPM practice — without the vendor dependency, IT overhead, or 12-month procurement nightmare.</p><p><br></p><p>In this episode of the <a href="https://www.whatsyourbaseline.com/podcast/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">podcast</a> we talk about: </p><ul><li>Most BPM programs fail not because of bad content, but because organizations treat it as a pure IT exercise — buy a platform, check the box, and wonder why nothing sticks.</li><li>The three pillars every BPM capability needs are content, governance, and adoption — yet most organizations only address the first one.</li><li>Knowledge rented from consultants or SaaS vendors disappears the moment you stop paying; BPM OS is built on the principle that you own it outright, forever.</li><li>BPM OS targets three groups: small internal teams doing more with less, consulting organizations that want baked-in methodology for client delivery, and vendors looking to bundle a white-labeled practice layer with their platforms.</li><li><strong>Groundwork</strong> is the brainstorming and planning app — dump ideas onto a canvas, sort them into zones, and shift into structured planning mode with priorities and rough timelines.</li><li><strong>Playbook</strong> is a lightweight wiki for capturing structured knowledge, course profiles, stakeholder analyses, and methodology documentation — with templates so you never start from a blank page.</li><li><strong>Atlas</strong> generates visual subway maps of your learning curriculum or capability landscape, complete with time-sensitive station states, deprecation indicators, and links back to Playbook pages.</li><li><strong>Outline</strong> lets you define the detailed content structure of a course or deliverable in a hierarchical, mind-map-style view — moving from “What do we need to teach?” to "Exactly what are the chapters and items?”</li><li><strong>Course Flow</strong> is a Kanban-based project management tool for developing and iterating on courses, complete with a built-in feedback form, an inbox for triage, and a status dashboard across all active projects.</li><li><strong>Cadence</strong> is a personal (and optionally team) task planner organized by day and category — with recurring daily items, carry-forward of incomplete tasks, and a simple velocity metric to spot overload before it becomes a crisis.</li><li>The entire stack runs on Node.js, saves files as Markdown and JSON (no database required), plays nicely with Google Drive or OneDrive for backup, and optionally connects to GitHub or GitLab for full version history.</li><li>Apps interoperate through lightweight linking and import/export — cards from Groundwork flow into Atlas, tasks from CourseFlow export into Cadence, and every Playbook page carries a permanent link that works anywhere in the stack.</li></ul><p><br></p><p>Find out more and download your free personal copy of Cadence at <a href="whatsyourbaseline.com/bpm-os" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferer">whatsyourbaseline.com/bpm-os</a>—and check the episode show notes for a PDF overview of all six apps.</p><p><br></p><p>Reach out by emailing <a href="mailto:
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