Drift Is Not Failure
February 19, 2026

Marcel Ventosa
CEO
Systems architect in construction and culture. Writing at the seams of structure and reflection.
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This week I've been auditing our company drive.
Not because anything was wrong. On the surface, it was solid.
We already use a structured numbering system. File names follow
a clear convention. Search usually works.
But when I started looking closely, small pockets of drift had
appeared.
A folder where files had been dropped without proper naming.
Misspellings that quietly break search. A handful of aspirational
subfolders in accounting, built for a future state, sitting empty
and adding noise.
Nothing dramatic. Everything technically functional.
But enough to dilute clarity.
Cleaning up those pockets didn't just make things neater. It
exposed process gaps. It clarified ownership. It surfaced places
where we were compensating manually for ambiguity.
The system didn't fail. It drifted.
Drift is subtle. It accumulates quietly. You don't notice it
until you stop and ask whether the structure still reflects
reality.
Good architecture doesn't eliminate maintenance. It requires
gardening: continuous small corrections, and occasional pruning
of ideas that were right in theory but premature in practice.
I'm about a fifth of the way through. Already the effect is
disproportionate.
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