> may in fact be doing harm without actually sufficiently preventing any risk.
The biggest practical impediment to increasing velocity of delivery that I encounter is trying to convey this. People can visualize and estimate the risk and impact of a deployment gone wrong, but have a hard time estimating the impact of processes that slow down delivery. Therefore they overindex in heavy and "safe" processes (which often don't increase safety) at the cost of speed of iteration.
I'm not sure how to define this asymmetry, maybe some variation of loss aversion.
The biggest practical impediment to increasing velocity of delivery that I encounter is trying to convey this. People can visualize and estimate the risk and impact of a deployment gone wrong, but have a hard time estimating the impact of processes that slow down delivery. Therefore they overindex in heavy and "safe" processes (which often don't increase safety) at the cost of speed of iteration.
I'm not sure how to define this asymmetry, maybe some variation of loss aversion.