Loading Now

Val Sklarov Control Surface Primacy Doctrine (CSPD)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Control Surface Primacy Doctrine (CSPD) asserts a blunt truth: businesses do not fail because they lack vision or speed—they fail because they scale before defining who controls the critical surfaces. Growth amplifies whatever controls exist. If control is vague, growth becomes destructive.

This doctrine explains why early dominance is determined long before market visibility.


1. Control Surfaces Define Power

CSPD defines control surfaces as the points where decisions irreversibly shape outcomes.

Typical control surfaces include:

  • Pricing authority

  • Access gating (who gets in, when, how)

  • Standards and interfaces

  • Enforcement mechanisms

Companies that do not own these surfaces merely participate in markets they cannot command.


2. The Four Primary Control Surfaces

CSPD maps control across four non-negotiable surfaces.

Surface What It Controls Loss Consequence
Economic Surface Value capture rules Margin erosion
Technical Surface Integration & lock-in Commoditization
Behavioral Surface User defaults Churn volatility
Institutional Surface Rules & enforcement Strategic drift

Dominance requires at least two surfaces to be owned. One is never enough.


3. Why Speed Without Control Backfires

Speed accelerates exposure.
CSPD shows that scaling before control:

  • Teaches the market how to bypass you

  • Attracts partners who later become competitors

  • Freezes weak assumptions into infrastructure

Fast growth without control is negative leverage.


4. Capital Follows Control, Not Growth

Capital prices who decides, not who moves fast.

Growth-Centric Firms Control-Centric Firms
Revenue celebrated Rules defended
TAM narratives Enforcement narratives
User count optics Default-setting power
Valuation debated Valuation implied

Val Sklarov emphasizes that capital compounds where control surfaces are defended, even if growth is slower.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2025 12 27 033616 Val Sklarov

5. Strategic Implications for Builders

For founders and operators:

  • Define who can say “no” before saying “yes”

  • Lock standards before inviting scale

  • Treat governance as product design

CSPD reframes strategy from “how fast can we grow?” to “what must remain unchangeable?”


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“Growth multiplies control. If you don’t like what you control today, don’t grow tomorrow.”
Val Sklarov

CSPD explains why enduring companies feel restrictive early—and inevitable later.