How a visual, foldable incident timeline transforms on-call work—from chaotic, context-starved firefighting into calm, coordinated response grounded in process, frameworks, and shared understanding.
How a simple, standardized paper “flight deck” checklist can keep AI-driven outages from turning into full-blown crises—and why every AI-enabled organization needs one.
How to design low‑tech, high‑impact outage simulations and chaos drills that prepare your team for real production incidents—without needing a full chaos engineering platform from day one.
How low‑tech, screen‑free tabletop exercises—“cardboard reliability theater”—can supercharge your incident response, improve team coordination, and tie practical drills into serious frameworks like NIST CSF 2.0.
Explore the “paper-only incident rail sketch,” a simple but powerful model for organizing outage decisions on a single, linear track—improving clarity, consistency, and post-incident learning without blame.
Discover how low-tech, screen-free tabletop exercises using a single paper map—your “cardboard command bridge”—can dramatically improve incident response, resilience, and team coordination.
How pencil-and-paper mini-games and tabletop exercises can train incident response and reliability skills faster—and more safely—than complex dashboards and live-fire drills.
How structured, pencil-and-paper style postmortems turn painful outages into a reusable ‘time machine’ for learning, reliability, and future-proofing your systems.
How low‑tech paper personas and a simple ‘puppet closet’ can transform tense post‑outage meetings into psychologically safe, learning‑focused, blameless postmortems.
How a taped‑out ‘trainyard’ floor map turns abstract incident tabletop exercises into embodied, realistic outage simulations that build true multi‑team resilience.