How to design a two‑level workflow in Blackboard where ground‑level instructors fix issues in real time while strategic leaders oversee evidence‑based patterns, using CTEM‑style thinking and design‑for‑manufacturing principles.
How to design and build the Analog Incident Lighthouse Staircase—a simple, paper‑based, step‑by‑step visualization that keeps your team aligned, your data consistent, and your systems like PagerDuty and CrateDB in sync during live incidents.
How a simple, shared, continuously updated “trainyard chalkboard” can transform high-pressure outage response—from chaos and crossed wires to coordinated, visual problem-solving.
How simple, analog handoff practices—paired with modern tools like Jira Service Management and solid runbooks—can quietly prevent tomorrow’s outages and transform your incident management resilience.
How to redesign your incident response and postmortems around a simple, shared “paper map” that follows cognitive load, supports stressed brains, and safely integrates AI assistance in real outages.
How to design a shelf of paper-based, scenario-specific incident guides that reliably support engineers during high‑stakes outages—especially when digital tools fail.
How to use chaos engineering, pre‑mortems, and structured early‑warning experiments as an “incident signal greenhouse” to spot failures on paper and in controlled tests—before they become real outages.
When your tools go dark, your team doesn’t have to. How “pencil-only” backups, hand-drawn playbooks, and embedded logging can turn chaotic outages into navigable nights.
How an imaginary paper-lined railway carriage can reshape your incident response culture into something calmer, clearer, and much more effective—especially when everything seems to be on fire.
How to turn live outages into a walkable comic strip using a paper-first storyboard wall that clarifies timelines, improves post-incident reviews, and accelerates learning across your team.