How benchmarking, fair on-call, automation, practice, and small engineering micro‑habits can quietly transform your reliability program and shrink the blast radius of incidents over time.
How to turn almost-accidents into a living library of lessons—using near-miss reporting, smart tools, and practical templates to prevent cascading failures in construction, manufacturing, and complex systems.
How to turn incident response practice into an engaging, low-tech tabletop "game night" that builds real reliability skills and better system design thinking.
How a paper-first ‘garden railway’ metaphor can transform incident tabletop exercises into a living, low-cost reliability practice that grows stronger over time.
How to turn incident simulations, blameless postmortems, and intentional knowledge sharing into a living “bazaar” of reliability practices that move beyond theory and actually change how your teams operate.
How small, scheduled “tickets” of reliability work—and a simple Kanban-style system—can transform analog circuit reliability from chaotic firefighting into calm, predictable engineering practice.
How low‑tech tools like paper compass rooms, runbooks, and escalation trees can turn chaotic incidents into calm, coordinated response—especially for modern on‑call teams under pressure.
How a physical walk‑around timeline, ICS-inspired roles, and modern incident tools combine to create powerful live incident exercises that actually change how your team responds under pressure.
How a simple, paper-based, 15‑minute daily ritual can reclaim operations as a respected practice, improve on-call health, and quietly grow a stronger reliability culture—one small “time garden” session at a time.
How a simple wall of sticky notes can transform incident management into a daily reliability habit—turning scattered issues into visible patterns and sustainable SRE practice.