# Decide
A decision is a **commitment that changes what people do**.
Not a preference.
Not a discussion.
Not a slide deck.
## Start here if
- You're stuck in "discussion mode" and need a commitment.
- Ownership is fuzzy or decisions drift after meetings.
- You need a decision that survives handovers.
Try next:
- [[Decision Snapshot]]
- [[Decision Shareback Post (3 min)]]
- [[Decision Review Cadence (15 min)]]
## Run one small move
- Capture the commitment: [[Decision Snapshot]]
- If promises keep breaking: [[Predictability]]
- If work starts and stalls: [[Work Readiness Check (DoR + Full Kit) (10 min)]]
- If the decision is waiting on others: [[Decision Handoff Clarifier (10 min)]]
- If the call is risky: [[Decision Hygiene for Risky Calls (30 min)]]
- If drift is accumulating: [[Stability Review Cadence (25 min)]]
- If escalation is the default move: [[Escalation vs Engagement]]
## What "good" looks like
You can name:
- what we decided
- who owns it
- what we're trading off
- when we'll review
- what would change our mind
Then go to [[Learn]] so the loop closes.
## Decision hygiene
The practice layer: habits and tools that keep individual decisions clean, legible, and revisable.
- [[Decision Snapshot]] — the minimum artefact; one screen capturing what was decided, what was traded, and when to review
- [[Decision Shareback Post (3 min)]] — publish closure so the decision travels to everyone who needs to act on it
- [[Decision Review Cadence (15 min)]] — pre-agreed review rhythm; the structural defence against drift
- [[Tripwire Template (5 min)]] — a pre-agreed signal that says "stop and reassess"; the fastest way to make a decision revisable
- [[07_Tools/Signals and Review Points]] — set a named signal and review date after any commitment; the habit that closes the decide-learn loop
## Decision rights and ownership
Most decision failures are not failures of analysis — they are failures of clarity about who decides what.
- [[Decision Rights over RACI - Why It Happens]] — why RACI fails to clarify authority and what produces unclear decision rights
- [[Escalation vs Engagement]] — when escalation is structurally correct vs when it is a symptom of unclear authority, low trust, or conflict avoidance
- [[Ownership and Consequence]] — the relationship between authority and accountability; what happens when they come apart
- [[Escalation as Risk Transfer - Deep Dive]] — the mechanism; escalation as a rational response to high-consequence decisions with unclear decision rights
- [[Fake Autonomy vs Real Empowerment - Deep Dive]] — the gap between nominal authority and practical authority; when people have the label but not the conditions to use it
## Decision drift
Temporary decisions become permanent. Closed decisions get re-litigated. Clear commitments erode.
- [[Decision Drift (When Temporary Becomes Permanent)]] — the primary concept note; how drift happens and what interrupts it
- [[Decision Debt and Drift - Why It Happens]] — the mechanism; what structural conditions cause decisions to drift
- [[Chesterton’s Fence]] — before reversing a decision, understand what it was solving; the defence against reflexive undoing
- [[Decision as a Knowledge Artifact - Deep Dive]] — decisions carry knowledge; when they drift, the knowledge is lost too
- [[Re-litigation When Closure Is Expensive - Deep Dive]] — the mechanism behind decisions that keep coming back
## High-stakes and risky decisions
When the consequences of a wrong call are large, the process needs more structure — not more debate.
- [[Decision Hygiene for Risky Calls (30 min)]] — a structured session for decisions with significant downside
- [[Reversibility and Risk - Why It Happens]] — why reversibility is the key variable in deciding how much process a decision deserves
- [[Two-Way Door vs One-Way Door (3 min)]] — a fast calibration: is this decision hard to undo? The answer determines how much caution is warranted
- [[Premortem]] — imagine the decision failed; work backwards to the causes; surfaces hidden risks before commitment
- [[Cost of Delay Read (10 min)]] — make the time cost of waiting visible; sometimes the riskiest decision is no decision
## Decision mechanisms
The patterns underneath decision failure — how good intentions produce bad process.
- [[Consensus Theatre and Decision by Diffusion - Deep Dive]] — when "everyone agrees" is a performance of agreement rather than genuine convergence
- [[Silence as Risk Management - Deep Dive]] — why people stay quiet in decision meetings and what silence is actually communicating
- [[Authority Gradient and Loudest Voice Wins - Deep Dive]] — the mechanism by which hierarchy collapses decision quality
- [[Accountability Sinks Create Responsibility Drift - Deep Dive]] — how diffuse structures absorb accountability without producing ownership
- [[Protocol Politics and Process as Alibi - Deep Dive]] — when process is used to avoid the decision rather than improve it
## The inference backbone
A lot of "disagreement" is actually people standing on different rungs of inference.
Owlery makes those rungs visible so the loop stays adult-adult.
- Lens: [[Ladder of Inference]]
- Quick reset: [[Ladder Check (7 min)]]
## References
- Decision-making under uncertainty (overview): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decision_theory
- Gary Klein, recognition-primed decision model (overview): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recognition-primed_decision_model
## See Also
- [[Decision Hygiene Map]] — the operational map for this pillar; the full toolkit for keeping individual decisions clean
- [[Decision Mechanisms Map]] — the catalogue of decision patterns; what produces each failure mode and the counter-move
- [[Sensemaking Map]] — the upstream step; situations need to be classified before a decision is sound
- [[Feedback Conversations Map]] — decisions need to be communicated and challenged; the quality of that conversation shapes whether the commitment holds