Business Ownership
The semantic core is technology-agnostic — and that is what makes
genuine business ownership possible.
Business knowledge cannot be truly owned by the business when it is
expressed through technical models that require translation. The
semantic core is written in business language, at the level of business
concepts, so domain experts can read it, challenge it, approve it, and
maintain it directly. Governance becomes an operational responsibility
of the business rather than a review activity performed after technical
decisions have already been made.
Authority, Not Reviewer
The domain expert's role is not to approve what a technical team has
already decided. Their judgement determines what the model says.
A model governed by reviewers is still owned by whoever made the
original interpretation. Genuine governance requires domain experts
to act as authorities: resolving ambiguity, defining the rules, and
determining which understanding becomes authoritative. Their approval
is not a final checkpoint. It is the basis on which the model becomes
trusted.
Unbroken Chain of Traceability
Every element of the operating model must be traceable forward to its
implementation and backward to the evidence and authority that
justified it.
Governance depends on being able to explain not only what the model
says, but why it says it. Each rule, capability, calculation, and
workflow remains connected to its source evidence, its approved
interpretation, and every implementation derived from it. That chain
makes change assessable, decisions auditable, and business intent
visible throughout execution.