rearchitect

rearchitect
v.
To make fundamental changes to the design or structure of something.
Example Citation:
"The workshops are headed by Women Services counselor Jane Maxwell. She feels there is a need to have these workshops available for women of all backgrounds because sometimes women suffer from both self-esteem and assertiveness issues.
'I want women to rearchitect themselves — focus on the positive aspects of themselves and get rid of the negative,' Maxwell said."
— Andrea Parker, "SIUC hosts self-esteem workshop for women," University Wire, July 11, 2001
Earliest Citation:
"What he really wants to do, he says, is 'rearchitect' the market. It was something he achieved at Mars with the Mars Bar ice-cream, an innovation which many thought couldn't work and, if it did, would cannibalise the sales of chocolate Mars Bars. It didn't and went on to become a hugely profitable line, selling at twice the price of normal choices. In similar fashion, he wants to turn the accepted model of the clothing market on its head."
— Andrew Davidson, "Allan Leighton; interview with the Asda CEO," Management Today, September 1997
Notes:
Today's bit of verb-iage comes to us by way of the technology industry, which never saw a noun it couldn't turn into a verb. The pocket protector crowd have been using this verb for a long time, but the Word Spy's interest is in non-technical usage, as in the above citation.
Just for the heck of it, here's the earliest use I could find for rearchitect in a technological context:
"That's probably the biggest reason to rethink, rearchitect — whatever you want to call it — systems we have now, even those that are fairly new."
— Wayne Rhodes, "Whatever will be will be," Infosystems, March 1987
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