Back to Dashboards

Structural Memory Mapper

Map how purpose is encoded in institutional architecture

Structural Memory: Organizations with structural memory encode purpose in their architecture, not just their narratives. When purpose is embedded in legal structures, capital design, and procedures, it survives leadership changes, document rewrites, and cultural drift.

Architectural Encoding

35% weight

Purpose encoded in legal structure, capital design, and governance architecture.

0/3

Legal structure reflects core mission

Capital structure prevents purpose drift

Purpose exists only in mission statement documents

Procedural Encoding

25% weight

Purpose encoded in recurring processes and decision-making protocols.

0/3

Decision templates embed mission criteria

Review processes check mission alignment

Procedures can be changed without mission review

Relational Encoding

25% weight

Purpose encoded in stakeholder relationships and accountability structures.

0/3

Stakeholder agreements reference mission

Accountability flows back to purpose

New relationships formed without mission alignment check

Temporal Encoding

15% weight

Purpose encoded in planning horizons and cyclical processes.

0/3

Planning cycles match mission timescales

Historical decisions are accessible and reference mission

Short-term pressures override long-term mission

Key Insight from IMG Theory

Organizations that rely solely on narrative memory (mission statements, documents, culture) are vulnerable to reinterpretation. Structural memory encodes purpose in architecture itself—legal structures, capital design, accountability relationships—making it resistant to drift.