The books, monographs, and field reports we keep on the desk. Five themes — on the gap, on retention, on the long view, on the snow leopard, and on the craft. Updated quarterly. Curated by hand.
A company that publishes a quarterly issue, runs a four-to-six-hour diagnostic on a practice's stack, and writes essays on the gap between systems is, structurally, a company that reads. We thought the library should be visible.
The list below is not exhaustive and is not aspirational. It is the actual reading we return to when we are designing a module, drafting a post, or arguing with each other about what the layer should refuse to do. Some of the books are operational. Some are about retention. Some are about the long view, which is the one most aesthetic-practice software companies have given up on. One section is about the snow leopard, because the species is not a moodboard choice — it is a structural metaphor we read about closely.
If a book is here, it has earned a re-read. If it is not here, it is either too new to have settled or it did not survive the second pass.
Operations, sensemaking, and the discipline of measuring what happens between the steps rather than inside them. The gap is where most of a practice's actual revenue lives — and most software is structurally blind to it.
The original case for measuring throughput at the bottleneck rather than utilization at every step. Read this if you want to understand why a practice with a fully-utilized front desk can still be losing money — the bottleneck has just moved.
A flow-theory book that reads like operations philosophy. The chapter on the cost of queues alone justifies the shelf space — most no-show recovery problems are queue problems in disguise.
Why organizations notice some signals and miss others, structurally. Useful framing when you are trying to explain to a practice owner why their existing tools are not going to surface the patterns they keep almost-seeing.
The behavioral, operational, and emotional reasons patients keep coming back — or quietly stop. Retention is rarely a marketing problem. It is almost always a coordination problem with a cognitive surface.
A structured argument for the post-visit window as the most underused real estate in a service business. We borrow the eight-phase frame loosely; the underlying point — that the first hundred days after the first visit are where the relationship is decided — is the one we keep returning to.
Foundational retention math. Reichheld's argument about the compounding economic value of long relationships predates most of the SaaS retention literature by a decade and is, in our reading, more durable.
For the peak–end rule alone. Why a review request fired on day 21 fails and one fired on day 3 lands is, almost entirely, an artifact of how the experiencing self and remembering self disagree about the same visit.
Permanence as a design choice. Why the cadence and the structure of a company do most of the work — and why most strategies that sound bold in the quarter look brittle in the decade.
The literal long-view book. Brand's argument for designing institutions and instruments to last across generations is, structurally, the same argument we make about reporting cadence and contract architecture.
A short book that condenses fifty years of historical reading into propositions a practice owner can read in an evening. The chapter on character and history is, in our reading, an underrated business book hiding inside a history book.
The conditions under which a company outlasts the conditions that built it. The book's case for preserving the core while stimulating progress is the case we make every time we say we are not pivoting the cadence to match the quarter.
The species, the landscape, and the conservation literature behind the brand mark. The snow leopard is not a moodboard choice. It is a structural metaphor we read about — and we expect ourselves to know what we are talking about when we use it.
The book that put the species on the cultural map. Matthiessen's account of a Himalayan expedition with George Schaller is at once a field journal, a meditation, and the reason most North American readers know the silhouette at all.
The foundational fieldwork on Himalayan wild sheep and goats — and, by extension, the prey base that determines snow leopard density. Schaller's method is, in itself, a lesson in what patient observation actually looks like.
Not a book. A set of annual program reports we read end-to-end every year because the cause line in our footer is not a marketing decision — it is a contract clause, and we owe the cause our attention.
If you publish, you read about publishing. The three books we keep on the shelf next to the editor's chair — on plain prose, on revision, and on the typography that holds the page together.
The plainness of the prose in our blog index page and our audit deliverable owes more to Zinsser than to any contemporary content style guide. Re-read it any time a draft is reaching for the wrong adjective.
McPhee on structure. The case study on the New Yorker piece that took eight years to draft is the strongest argument we have ever read for treating revision as the actual work — not an editing pass at the end of it.
The typographic decisions on this site — the long primary measure, the rag-right setting, the use of italics rather than bold for emphasis — are downstream of Bringhurst. The book is one of the few we consult mid-design, not just before it.
Three books we are reading, with bookmarks roughly two-thirds of the way through. Listed for the same reason the rest of the library is listed: a company is, in part, the shape of what it is currently reading.
Caro on his own method. The discipline of turning every page as primary research is the same discipline we are trying to install in the audit process.
A physics book that reads like an essay on permanence. We picked it up because we kept using the word cadence and wanted to be more careful about what time actually is in a system that depends on it.
Reads as a study in scope — the territory a system controls quietly and the territory it controls visibly. We picked it up for unrelated reasons and stayed for the framing.
Read the rest of the issue, or request the Scorecard. Both are useful.
Request the Scorecard →One percent of every Sculptrix contract supports the Snow Leopard Trust. We're built on permanence — that includes the natural world.
Sculptrix.ai
The Practice Intelligence Layer for aesthetic practices.
Built to be on top.
Newsreader for display and body. JetBrains Mono for interface and metadata.
Color: cream, ink, oxblood, sandstone, and navy — chosen to last beyond the quarter.
Briana O'Brien, founder & developer.
Padraic Doyle, chairman & co-founder.
Jennifer Doyle, co-founder & investor.
Filed from Belle Isle, Florida.