In this episode of The Deep Dive, we step beyond team mechanics and into a harder organisational question:
When a decision carries real weight, who actually owns it?
Agile promises empowerment, but empowerment without structural clarity is fragile.
As organisations scale, governance layers increase. Risk management expands. Alignment meetings multiply. Yet decision rights are rarely redrawn.
The result?
- Decision latency.
- Authority drift.
- Escalation disguised as alignment.
- Shadow ownership.
Based on insights from books by Matthew Coxall, this conversation explores how separating accountability from authority creates predictable friction.
When accountability sits in one place and authority in another, delay isn’t surprising. It is designed into the system.
This episode examines:
- Why autonomy often collapses under pressure
- How alignment theatre replaces ownership
- The structural cost of approval loops
- What mature organisations do differently
This is not a critique of leadership or governance. It is a diagnosis of structural design.
If you’ve ever felt that your teams are “empowered” until something important happens, this episode will resonate.
Where do decisions stall in your organisation?
And who absorbs the delay?
Part of The Deep Dive – a series on digital product and agile.
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