Risk tolerance recalibration - push and be wrong for low-risk releases
Situation
Established new release philosophy: 'push and be wrong' for low-risk changes, prioritizing speed over perfection. Directed Nathan to ship two approved CVE fixes for unused packages immediately as a precedent-setting test case, bypassing the usual review process.
Reasoning
Team risk aversion is a cultural blocker to 2x velocity. Approved CVE fixes sitting in a queue because nobody wants to push the button is exactly the institutional paralysis that prevents doubling output. By choosing two low-risk packages (unused, already approved) as the test case, sets a precedent with minimal downside — teaching the team that approved changes are expected to ship. This is the behavioral change component of the velocity mandate: North Star defines WHERE, ownership model defines WHO, this defines HOW FAST.
Additional Context
Child of 'Mandate big leaps risk approach for H1' (e7ab8a27). Part of Linux Leadership Sync all-day session. Operationalizes the risk philosophy into a concrete release practice.
Observed Evidence
Fathom Pt 3: 'Risk Tolerance Recalibrated: push and be wrong philosophy for low-risk packages.' Test case: 'Ship two approved CVE fixes for unused packages immediately, bypassing the usual review process.' Rationale: 'This action sets a new precedent and teaches the team that approved changes are expected to ship unless there is a clear, documented reason not to.'
Confidence Breakdown
Reasoning Depth Analysis
Related Context
fathom
The team will adopt a 'push and be wrong' philosophy for low-risk packages, prioritizing speed over perfection. Ship two approved CVE fixes immediately as precedent.
Outcome
No outcome recorded yet.
Decision ID: c01f2dd2-e03d-4a52-9112-cfc2a9f07c30