Signal 01
Falling behind
The ways of working that used to be enough now feel too slow, fragmented, or reactive for the pace of change.
HRVN helps product and technology leaders diagnose operating friction, improve team flow, and build practical AI-era capability.
For organisations where teams are working hard, but delivery, value, decision-making, or AI adoption still feel inconsistent, fragile, or unclear.
Where teams get stuck
The harder problem is that the operating model around them no longer makes progress easy.
Signal 01
The ways of working that used to be enough now feel too slow, fragmented, or reactive for the pace of change.
Signal 02
Teams are delivering work, but the value is uneven. Some initiatives land well, while others struggle to connect clearly to business outcomes.
Signal 03
Product and engineering are working hard, but the relationship feels rough around the edges — with unclear ownership, late decisions, or fragile handovers.
Signal 04
People are active, meetings are full, and delivery is happening — but leadership still finds it hard to see whether the work is creating enough value.
Signal 05
Leaders can feel that something is not working, but do not yet have a clear enough picture of where the real constraint sits.
The HRVN point of view
When product and technology teams struggle, the problem is often not motivation, skill, or commitment. It is that people are working inside unclear priorities, blurred ownership, slow decisions, or competing expectations.
HRVN helps leaders and teams create the conditions for better work: clearer direction, stronger collaboration, more useful rhythms, and a sharper connection between effort and business value.
When those conditions are missing, good people often work harder than they should just to make progress.
How HRVN can help
We understand the problem together, identify the real constraints, and agree the most useful way to move forward.
Embedded product and technology leadership for organisations that need senior capability, but may not need a full-time role yet.
HRVN can step in quickly to lead longer-term initiatives, provide interim leadership cover, support a management team through change, or bring clarity to product, technology, and AI priorities.
Focused work over a shorter period, usually 4 to 6 weeks, to make progress on a specific problem, risk, or value-creation opportunity.
This works well when there is a clear area of friction that needs concentrated attention, such as improving product and technology alignment, clarifying team ownership, reviewing AI capability, or creating a more effective operating rhythm.
Targeted advice, challenge, and tailored support for leaders, founders, investors, or management teams who need an experienced outside perspective.
This can include working through a specific decision, reviewing an operating challenge, shaping internal material, or helping leaders think clearly about product, technology, AI capability, and organisational effectiveness.
Why HRVN is different
HRVN is a UK-based consultancy led by Adam Harrowven, whose background spans technology, product, and leadership — from Technical Lead to Head of Engineering to Vice CPTO at a regtech company recognised in the Financial Times FT1000 list of Europe's fastest-growing companies, with experience across public sector, finance, and early-stage startups.
This has included leading changes across product and engineering ways of working, building AI capability, and helping leadership teams create clearer rhythms for value delivery.
Close enough to the detail to understand how teams actually build. Senior enough to understand the leadership problems around direction, structure, and priorities.
Worked in enough different environments to know that the context changes, but many of the underlying problems are similar. HRVN brings those perspectives together to help leaders and teams understand what is getting in the way, and what needs to change.
If your product, technology, or AI work feels harder than it should, HRVN can help you talk through the situation, make sense of the problem, and decide what kind of support would be most useful.