SRF

The Segulah Reputation Framework

Reputation is not a single thing. The SRF disaggregates it into five assessable dimensions—Substantive Authority, Behavioral Consistency, Narrative Coherence, Relational Capital, and Institutional Resilience—revealing where an institution is strong, exposed, or misaligned between reality and perception.

IAM

The Influence Architecture Model

Influence is not a volume problem. It is an architecture problem. The IAM maps influence as specific pathways across three audience tiers, identifies which are load-bearing, and designs the architecture that optimizes them.

LPS

The Legacy Positioning System

Legacy is not a retrospective concept. The LPS identifies and positions legacy through four lenses—the Foundational Record, the Distinctive Contribution, the Living Imprint, and the Forward Projection—while there is still time to ensure it reflects what is true.

PAF

The Purpose Alignment Framework

The PAF refuses to treat purpose as a communications exercise. It measures alignment between what an institution declares, what its operations accomplish, and what stakeholders actually experience. Where these diverge, no communications strategy can close the gap.

NEI

The Narrative Equity Index

An institution’s narrative is an asset with measurable characteristics—ownership, consistency, distinctiveness, and credibility. The NEI treats narrative as capital and produces strategic guidance governing how communications investment should be allocated.

STA

The Stakeholder Trust Architecture

Trust is not a single quantity. The STA disaggregates it into four pillars—Competence, Integrity, Benevolence, and Predictability—maps each across stakeholder segments, and identifies the specific behaviors building or eroding it.


Discuss an Engagement

Each converts institutional reality into actionable counsel.