Francesco Saltarelli Announces a “Pre-Commitment Rule” to Reduce Rework and Improve Results
Francesco Saltarelli, a Montreal-based landscape designer and founder of Saltarelli Outdoor Design, is adopting a simple decision habit aimed at sharper timelines, clearer scope, and more consistent outcomes.
Quebec, Canada, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Francesco Antonio Saltarelli, founder of Saltarelli Outdoor Design, today announced a personal work-habit policy he is adopting across his schedule and decision-making: a Pre-Commitment Rule designed to reduce preventable rework and improve follow-through.
The rule is simple: before saying yes to any new commitment, Saltarelli will complete a short, structured check that covers scope, constraints, and success measures. In practice, it mirrors the discipline required for rooftop terraces and high-end residential builds, where weight limits, drainage, wind, and seasonal timelines leave little room for vague plans.
Saltarelli’s motivation comes from a pattern he has repeated throughout his career: outcomes improve when decisions are made with clarity and pacing, not speed.
Success, he has said, starts with repetition and follow-through. “Success is consistency over time.”
He has also tied results to real-world use, not appearances. “A rooftop terrace that sits empty is not a success.”
He has described leadership as reducing confusion before it spreads. “Leadership is clarity.”
And he has stressed that progress is built in phases. “Growth takes seasons.”
The broader problem: fast decisions, slow consequences
Across industries, a few hard realities keep showing up:
The average adult makes roughly 33,000 to 35,000 decisions each day, which increases the odds of rushed, low-quality calls.
Knowledge workers can spend about 2.5 hours per day, roughly 30% of the workday, searching for information.
A widely cited 2023 Procore survey found 75% of projects exceeded planned budgets, with average cost increases around 15% due to mid-project changes.
PMI has reported that 11.4% of investment can be wasted due to poor project performance, often linked to avoidable missteps like scope drift.
Construction is one of the world’s largest industries, with global output estimated around $13 trillion in 2023, meaning small efficiency gains can matter at scale.
What changed
Saltarelli is formalising how he commits to work and how he sets boundaries around time, scope, and inputs.
Instead of deciding in the moment, he will run each new commitment through a short checklist:
Define the outcome in one sentence
Name the constraints (time, budget, weather, capacity)
Identify the first two actions that move the work forward
Decide how progress will be measured
This applies to client work, internal planning, and personal commitments.
Why it works
Saltarelli’s field rewards specificity. Rooftop terraces and urban spaces punish vague assumptions. A small miss early can become a cascade of changes later. The Pre-Commitment Rule is meant to pull hidden complexity forward, while there is still room to adjust without expensive reversals.
It also supports the style he has built his firm around: clear timelines, transparent budgeting, and hands-on oversight.
How success is measured
Saltarelli will track results using a small set of operational signals:
Fewer mid-project changes driven by unclear scope
More accurate timeline forecasts against real weather and capacity
Fewer “double work” moments where a step is repeated
Higher consistency in client handoffs and contractor coordination
More predictable weekly workload, with fewer late-stage squeezes
Copy my approach: 10 steps anyone can implement
Write your next commitment as an outcome, not a task
List three constraints before you agree to anything
Identify the first two actions, and schedule them immediately
Set a “no same-day yes” rule for non-urgent decisions
Create a one-page template for recurring decisions (money, time, projects)
Use a 15-minute “scope check” before starting any multi-step work
Reduce inputs: choose one source of truth for files, notes, and plans
Add a buffer block in your calendar each week for rework and surprises
End each week by choosing one thing to stop, not just one thing to start
Track one metric for 30 days (time saved, fewer changes, fewer delays)
Choose one step today. Apply it for 30 days. Track it with a simple weekly note. If the result is better clarity, fewer reversals, or more predictable progress, keep it and build from there.
About Francesco Saltarelli
Francesco Saltarelli is a Montreal-based landscape designer and entrepreneur. He is the founder of Saltarelli Outdoor Design, known for high-end backyards and rooftop terraces that combine clean architectural lines, climate-resilient planting, and practical outdoor living. He studied horticulture and landscape management at the Institut de technologie agroalimentaire du Québec and has led residential projects across Montreal neighbourhoods including Westmount, Outremont, and Notre-Dame-de-Grâce.
2026/03/10 17:33