How paper, tabletop exercises, and daily service rituals can transform your incident response from chaos into a reliable, well-run bistro.
How to design fast, low‑friction incident response games that teams can play with just a pencil and paper—building real reliability skills in 15‑minute chunks between meetings.
How to design humane on-call practices, embed SRE into everyday development, and use simple, repeatable rituals to keep your pager quiet—but trustworthy—during high-tech incidents.
How to design hands‑on, screen‑free reliability workshops using whiteboards, marker ink, and masking tape to train cross‑functional teams for real‑world incidents.
How a low-tech stack of index cards can radically improve incident response, post-incident reviews, and on-call sanity by capturing real-time evidence of outages.
How a low-tech, paper-based “incident lab” helps teams rehearse reliability, experiment with roles and communication, and turn analog insights into better runbooks, alerts, and on‑call practices.
How paper tags, low‑tech traces, and SRE-inspired discipline can turn mysterious analog failures into predictable, fixable problems.
How a low-tech "Clipboard Incident Atelier" can help modern engineering teams practice incident response, expose hidden dependencies, and build a proactive reliability culture using only paper, tape, and 30-minute rituals.
How hand‑drawn style service maps, fused with real‑time observability data, can replace rigid runbooks and radically speed up incident response in modern microservice environments.
How simple, analog “incident story” practices can act as kites in the wind—revealing hidden reliability risks in your systems long before they become production outages.