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In Part II of the Multi-Party Dilemma (MPD) drill retrospective, we reconvene to dig deeper into the implications and nuances of the simulated incident exercise hosted on the Uptime Labs platform. Eric Dobbs (incident analyst), Alex Elman (deputy IC), and Sarah Butt (incident commander) continue their debrief with Courtney, reflecting on how team behavior evolved under stress, the importance of expertise in managing non-technical aspects of an incident like saturation, and how deeply held assumptions often go unspoken until tested under pressure.
This episode emphasizes the complex social and cognitive dimensions of incident response, such as how people coordinate, communicate, and construct shared understanding. It highlights the value of analyzing drills not for failure points, but for what they reveal about real work, adaptation, and human coordination.
Key Highlights
Resources and References
By Courtney NashWatch on YouTube
In Part II of the Multi-Party Dilemma (MPD) drill retrospective, we reconvene to dig deeper into the implications and nuances of the simulated incident exercise hosted on the Uptime Labs platform. Eric Dobbs (incident analyst), Alex Elman (deputy IC), and Sarah Butt (incident commander) continue their debrief with Courtney, reflecting on how team behavior evolved under stress, the importance of expertise in managing non-technical aspects of an incident like saturation, and how deeply held assumptions often go unspoken until tested under pressure.
This episode emphasizes the complex social and cognitive dimensions of incident response, such as how people coordinate, communicate, and construct shared understanding. It highlights the value of analyzing drills not for failure points, but for what they reveal about real work, adaptation, and human coordination.
Key Highlights
Resources and References