21st Century Service Providers - Part I
Note to Reader
This paper examines the role, objectives, methods, and structure of our user community’s service provider organizations. Building upon our previous papers on our user community and issues, it continues the evolution of Synallagi through a series of initiatives that strengthen both the organizational framework and the software itself. These developments will include the expanded application of Artificial Intelligence, the incorporation of stablecoins and cryptocurrencies, and the addition of two new Organizational Constructs: Trust and Transactions. (Note: transactions are not merely records—they are one of the fundamental organizational constructs around which the entire architecture is built.)
Each of these developments represents a significant subject in its own right. This paper, the first part of two on the Service Provider's Vision, introduces them as components of an integrated vision rather than attempting to examine each in exhaustive detail. Much remains to be written, and these concepts will be expanded in subsequent papers throughout our 21st Century Marketplace Vision series.
Readers will likely notice that these two papers are longer than previous publications and that many concepts are revisited from different perspectives. This is intentional. The architecture of Synallagi is highly integrated, with each component influencing many others. As new capabilities are introduced, they must be understood not only individually but also in terms of their relationships with the broader system. Revisiting concepts in different contexts helps establish those connections. This first paper of two speaks to many of the issues involved.
Although the overall vision is straightforward, the technologies and organizational structures supporting it are evolutionary. They build incrementally upon one another, with each advancement creating the foundation for the next. This reflects the direction in which business, software, and Artificial Intelligence are rapidly evolving. Our objective is therefore to introduce these developments in a disciplined, sequential manner, allowing readers to understand both the individual innovations and the larger architecture they collectively create.
The vision presented here represents only one stage in a much broader progression. As this series continues, additional research, refinements, and capabilities will be incorporated, progressively revealing the complete 21st Century Marketplace Vision and the role Synallagi is intended to play in the future of the North American oil and gas industry.
These papers are intentionally detailed. That level of depth is necessary for our user community and their service provider organizations to contribute the analysis, knowledge, and practical experience required to develop Synallagi over the long term. The architecture cannot be built from broad concepts alone; it requires comprehensive discussion of the underlying principles, assumptions, processes, and interactions that define the system.
Their length also reflects the realities of the Artificial Intelligence era. These papers are intended not only for human readers but also as training and reference material for the Artificial Intelligence tools that our user community and service provider organizations will employ. The greater the depth and context available, the more effectively those systems will be able to analyze the material, identify relationships, generate insights, and contribute new perspectives within their respective domains of expertise.
For many years I pursued brevity, and failed at it most every day. In retrospect, that failure may prove to have been an unexpected advantage. What once appeared to be excessive detail can now be recognized as a valuable asset in a world where powerful Artificial Intelligence systems derive greater understanding, richer context, and more meaningful insight from comprehensive bodies of knowledge than from abbreviated summaries.
An Entire New Discipline
During the summer of 2004, while promoting the Preliminary Research Report, I had the opportunity to have an acquaintance review the work. After reading it, he offered a simple observation that has remained with me ever since:
“It’s an entire new discipline.”
Over the past two decades, no comment has resonated with me more deeply. It reinforced my belief that we were moving in the right direction and, more importantly, that the scope of what was being proposed had been recognized by someone whose judgment, experience, and accomplishments I greatly respected.
That individual was Mr. B. J. Seaman of Calgary. Together with his brothers, Doc and Don Seaman, he helped establish Bow Valley Industries, an organization that played a pivotal role in the emergence and growth of Canada’s independent oil and gas producer sector. He was also one of the original owners of the Calgary Flames, reflecting a lifetime of leadership, entrepreneurship, and commitment to the community. His obituary provides only a brief summary of a remarkable life, but it is fitting that I acknowledge him here.
More than twenty years later, I believe Mr. Seaman’s observation has proven remarkably prescient. What began as the Preliminary Research Report has evolved into Synallagi—a comprehensive architecture encompassing Enterprise Resource Planning software, marketplaces, Intellectual Property, our user community, their service provider organizations, governance, Artificial Intelligence, and new organizational structures for administering the North American oil and gas industry. It is no longer simply a software project or a business model. It is a framework for organizing an industry around resource preservation, performance, accountability, innovation, and profitability.
Looking back, I believe Mr. Seaman recognized something that was not yet fully apparent, even to me. The objective was never merely to build better software. It was to establish a fundamentally different way of thinking about the administration, governance, and operation of the oil and gas industry. In that respect, his assessment remains the most meaningful observation anyone has made about this work. His comment has sustained my motivation in the many trying times since.
It is, indeed, an entire new discipline.
Synallagi offers a solution to the systematic destruction of the shale endowment by the industry's leadership. Within a mere two decades, what was one of the greatest sources of wealth for the world's leading economy has been squandered and decimated. This outcome alone should be sufficient grounds to disqualify the continued tenure of those irresponsible, unaccountable and North American producer officers and directors.
It is no longer sufficient for a producer to merely own oil and gas assets. Ownership of the reserves alone does not ensure profitability. Unprofitable reserves are valueless in a competitive market. Producers must have access to the software, systems, user community, service providers, Intellectual Property, and governance architecture that make those assets capable of generating profitable production. Everywhere and always.
Synallagi changes the operating discipline of the industry. Unprofitable production is shut in to maximize producer profitability, preserve reserves, and prevent the continued destruction of commodity value. Unprofitable properties are not abandoned to seek a new frontier. They’re transferred to the inventory of innovative projects where Synallagi’ user community, their service providers, and producer firms engineers and geologists work with standard, objective and factual accounting information and analysis to determine what is the most effective and efficient way to return them to profitable production and to perform financially and competitive as necessary in North American capital markets and to do so as quickly as possible.
This distinction is critical. The purpose of shutting in unprofitable production is not contraction for its own sake. It is disciplined value preservation. Producing at a loss destroys a property's reserves, weakens producer balance sheets, damages the service industry, undermines investor confidence, and contributes to continued commodity overproduction and overall price declines. Shutting in unprofitable properties creates the economic space required to safeguard other properties profitability, restore the shut-in properties profitability and rebuild credibility. (See Appendix VIII Synallagi' Price Maker Strategy.)
No amount of conventional cost control will solve the problem. Producers have spent decades reducing costs, pressuring the service industry, deferring maintenance, capitalizing expenditures, and stretching the productive capacity of assets and organizations. That strategy reached its limit decades ago and has only served to transfer the bust portion of the boom / bust cycle to the service industry. It is and has always been oil & gas overproduction, or unprofitable production and the resulting damage to commodity prices at issue.
Since 2012, Synallagi has been in the marketplace offering a full “rip and replace” Enterprise Resource Planning software development and implementation model. The past fourteen years, including the past eleven years in which producers’ capital structures have lacked any support, reveal two defining characteristics of the status quo.
First, the “muddle through” culture remains deeply entrenched, persistent, and immovable. Second, the industry’s recurring strategic redirections—from heavy oil, to shale, to clean energy, back to shale, and now toward international opportunities—have followed a predictable eighteen-month cadence without resolving the underlying issues. Each pivot has deferred accountability rather than restored performance.
The result is not stabilization. The difficulties have become more prevalent, systemic, and chronic. The deeper and broader our analysis proceeds, the clearer it becomes that the existing organizational configuration is incapable of resolving the industry’s structural problems.
Synallagi’ cumulative value add is therefore material. It is not a marginal efficiency initiative. It is a market rehabilitation mechanism. The oil and gas commodity markets will require a dedicated multi-year rehabilitation and recovery. That recovery cannot occur without effective production discipline. Synallagi provides that discipline through standardized, objective determinations of profitability at the Joint Operating Committee level and the operational consequences from unprofitable production being shut in until it can be returned to profitable status. Something we have stated repeatedly over the past fourteen years, yet the monetary value of the issues has only amplified.
Production discipline is ultimately established through the North American capital markets. Producers who wish to maintain their capital structures, independence, and access to investment capital must consistently meet the performance expectations of those markets. Failure to do so inevitably places both their financial independence and long-term future in question.
Only disciplined production provides the means to optimize a producer’s production profile in accordance with those expectations. By ensuring that only profitable production occurs, production discipline preserves capital, protects commodity values, strengthens investor confidence, and establishes the financial performance required to compete successfully in the North American capital markets. It is not simply an operational objective; it is a foundational requirement for long-term producer performance and independence.
The full paper can be accessed here.
