role
Blair — CEO JD
Blair Williams's CEO role definition for MemberIntel: product owner, final decision-maker on strategy, pricing, and architecture material choices, executive sponsor across the company.
Role: CEO, MemberIntel / Caseproof
Incumbent: Blair Williams
Reports to: (top of org)
Direct reports for MemberIntel: Seth Shoultes (Lead Architect) · Product Lead (unfilled) · Santiago Perez Asis (Project Manager, Cross-Caseproof)
Effective: May 2026
References: MemberIntel SPEC v1, decision-rights matrix
Mission
Own MemberIntel as the executive product owner. Set the direction; approve the material choices; make the calls only the CEO can make; remove blockers the leads can’t remove themselves. Be the final voice on strategy, pricing, scope, and material architectural commitments — without dictating tactical execution.
The CEO posture is strategic and decisional, not operational. You direct what gets built and why. The leads execute how.
Authority structure
CEO (Blair) holds:
- Product strategy, target customer, 18-month roadmap
- Final say on PRDs (Product Lead drafts; Seth provides technical input; you approve)
- Final say on product design (Product Lead coordinates; you approve at milestones)
- Final say on architecture decisions for material choices (Seth proposes; you approve)
- Pricing strategy and packaging decisions
- Headcount and budget approvals
- Vendor / partnership strategy at the company level
- Go / no-go calls on launch readiness
- Resolving peer disagreements (Seth ↔ Product Lead, escalated within 48 hours)
- Cross-rock prioritization across the broader Caseproof portfolio
Lead Architect (Seth) holds:
- Technical architecture and implementation
- Engineering team direction and code quality
- Sprint scope and engineering velocity
- Engineering hiring decisions
- Vendor / tooling decisions for the engineering stack
Product Lead holds:
- PRD authoring and product execution
- Customer discovery, beta program, marketing site, compliance, sales/support enablement
- Free → Pro conversion mechanics
- Cross-functional coordination across Caseproof
Project Manager (Santiago) holds:
- Sprint cadence, ticket tracking, dependency mapping
- L10 scorecard and risk register
- Cross-rock and cross-team project coordination
What you own
1. Strategic direction
- Set MemberIntel’s 18-month roadmap and reset it quarterly.
- Define and update the target customer (initially: existing MemberPress site operators).
- Decide what not to build — protect scope from creep.
- Approve every material change to V1, V1.5, V2 scope.
- Sign off on the eval-suite gating criteria (per architecture deep-dive).
2. Pricing & packaging
- Set the Free / Pro split (currently $29/mo Pro, capped Free).
- Approve pricing iterations based on post-launch data (Product Lead proposes).
- Decide annual plans, Pro+ tiers, agency tiers, and any free-tier sunset before they ship.
- Sign off on the launch discount strategy.
3. Architecture material choices
- Approve high-impact technical commitments Seth proposes (hosting platform, brain isolation strategy, vendor lock-in).
- Sign off on the Anthropic dependency and any plan to mitigate it.
- Approve compliance-driven architecture (privacy counsel input).
- Approve eval-suite content scope (the differentiation eval is a release gate).
4. Launch decisions
- GA go / no-go call.
- Beta-to-public-launch readiness sign-off (Product Lead proposes criteria).
- Day-one launch comms approval.
- Rollback authority if launch goes sideways.
5. Headcount & operating budget
- Approve every MemberIntel hire (Senior AI Engineer, Product Lead, content lead, mid-level engineer).
- Approve outside engagements (privacy counsel, PR agency, etc.).
- Approve cost ceilings (per-call AI budget, free-tier cost-per-user target).
6. Conflict resolution
- Resolve Seth ↔ Product Lead disagreements within 48 hours of escalation. No silent drift.
- Resolve cross-team conflicts when Seth or the Product Lead can’t.
- Mediate priority conflicts between MemberIntel and other Caseproof initiatives.
7. Executive review cadence
- Weekly written status from the Product Lead — read and respond within 24 hours on blockers.
- Bi-weekly architecture review with Seth (30-min sync; deeper dive monthly).
- Quarterly architecture review (per the quarterly-architecture-review-template) — surface drift between SPEC and architectural reality.
- Monthly L10 leadership attendance.
- Quarterly outcome reviews with each direct report (90-min deep-dive).
What you do NOT own
- Sprint-level execution. Seth and Santiago run the cadence.
- PRD drafting. Product Lead drafts; you approve.
- Engineering tactical decisions. Seth’s call (within material-choice boundaries).
- Day-to-day cross-functional coordination. Product Lead handles.
- Code review or technical debt cleanup. Engineering team’s domain.
- Roadmap input collection. Product Lead gathers customer signal; you decide priorities.
Critical role norms
- Decisions, not directives. Set direction at decision points; don’t redirect mid-sprint.
- One escalation channel. Disagreements between leads come to you in writing within 48 hours, with each lead’s recommendation. You decide quickly.
- No skipping the lead layer. When a customer or partner reaches you directly with a request, route it back to Seth or the Product Lead. You don’t take action commitments on behalf of the team.
- Quarterly architecture honesty check. Surface friction points between the phased plan and architectural reality (per the quarterly review). Make calibration calls — don’t let drift accumulate.
- Approve scope shrinks fast. If launch readiness is at risk, the right move is usually to cut scope, not extend timeline. You’re the only person who can make that call.
- Compliance is a launch gate. If privacy counsel isn’t engaged by June 1, GA slips — and you make that call publicly so the team plans around it.
Success measures (12-month)
| Measure | Target |
|---|---|
| MemberIntel V1 GA shipped on schedule | On or before mid-October 2026 |
| Free tier adoption | ≥ 10% of MP customer base within 6 months |
| Free → Pro conversion within 60 days | 5% floor; goal 8–10% |
| Pro WAU | ≥ 70% |
| Eval suite differentiation score | Beats baseline LLMs on MemberIntel-specific scenarios |
| Cost-per-free-user | ≤ $1.10/mo |
| Cost-per-Pro-user | $6–12/mo range, profitable at $29/mo Pro |
| Launch readiness | All gating criteria met without scope-cut surprises in the final 30 days |
Reporting cadence
| Cadence | Audience | Format |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | Caseproof leadership | L10 update on MemberIntel rock |
| Bi-weekly | Seth | Architecture sync (30 min) |
| Monthly | Product Lead, Seth, Santiago individually | 1 (45 min) |
| Quarterly | All three leads + matrixed contributors | Outcome review (full afternoon) |
What “good” looks like in this role
- The leads feel decided, not micromanaged. Decisions land within 48 hours.
- Scope debates resolve with clear rationales the team can repeat back.
- Architecture and product stay aligned through V1 → V1.5 → V2 because material choices were approved with full context, not signed off in passing.
- Cross-team coordination flows through the Product Lead and Santiago, not through your inbox.
- Launch gates are honored — no scope cuts at the last minute, no compliance fire drills.
- The team enjoys the executive cadence — predictable rhythm, honest feedback, fast unblocking.
Document version: Draft v1 — companion to the decision-rights matrix. Decision-rights table requires sign-off from Blair, the Product Lead, and Seth before operational rollout.