This is the first post on the Foundation Projects blog. It exists less to say something new than to set expectations for everything that comes after — how posts are organized, how they're meant to be read, and how to find what you need without scrolling a chronological feed.
What will you find here?
Posts are grouped into a small set of formats, each with its own structure
and its own job to do. The homepage at /blog surfaces them as
collections — Pillar guides, Playbooks, Comparisons,
Explainers, Case studies — rather than a stream of dates. Pick the
collection that fits how you want to learn today.
How is each post structured?
Posts share a small set of repeatable building blocks so the layout is predictable as you read more of them.
- A short eyebrow tag and a clear question for a title.
- A standalone summary paragraph at the top, in case that's all you need.
- Headings that read as questions, so you can jump to the one that maps to what you're trying to figure out.
- Small callout modules — takeaways, context, pull-quotes, common mistakes — that surface the ideas you'd want to remember in isolation.
- A prev / next navigation at the end, scoped to the series the post belongs to (when it's part of one).
What's a series?
A series is a small ordered set of posts that read better together than
apart. When a post is part of one, you'll see a strip near the top
showing where you are in the sequence and how to step forward or back. A
dedicated /blog/series/[slug] page lays the whole series out as a
timeline so you can pick your entry point.
Will posts ever change?
Yes. We treat posts as living artefacts when the underlying material changes. Updates are dated and called out so the URL stays stable while the content keeps current.
What won't you find here?
A few things, on purpose:
- No tracking pixels or reading-history personalization.
- No newsletter pop-ups or email-capture interstitials inside posts.
- No anonymous author by-lines for opinion content.
- No invented statistics or fictional case studies. If a number isn't cited, it isn't quoted.
What's next?
The next post will land soon. In the meantime, the menu above and the
collections on /blog are the right places to look. If you're new and
want a single starting point, the Start here collection is the one
that's hand-curated for first-time readers.