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By the time an organization declares an incident, the problem is no longer detection.
It’s coordination.
Multiple teams begin investigating. Engineers search logs, leaders request updates, stakeholders ask for timelines, and communication channels fill quickly with information — and questions.
This is often referred to as a “war room.”
War rooms are intended to bring clarity.
But in many cases, they introduce confusion.
Episode 8 explores incident response coordination and why unstructured collaboration can slow down recovery instead of accelerating it. Each segment examines a different dimension of incident management: the role of centralized command, the risk of too many decision-makers, the importance of communication discipline, and how clearly defined roles allow teams to move faster under pressure.
The episode connects these ideas back to the Knight Capital incident, where the system continued operating while teams worked to understand and respond to the problem.
Together, these segments build toward a central insight:
War rooms don’t solve incidents. Structure does.
Bringing people together is not enough.
Without defined roles, authority, and communication discipline, coordination becomes noise.
And in fast systems, noise delays action.
By Jordon KeenBy the time an organization declares an incident, the problem is no longer detection.
It’s coordination.
Multiple teams begin investigating. Engineers search logs, leaders request updates, stakeholders ask for timelines, and communication channels fill quickly with information — and questions.
This is often referred to as a “war room.”
War rooms are intended to bring clarity.
But in many cases, they introduce confusion.
Episode 8 explores incident response coordination and why unstructured collaboration can slow down recovery instead of accelerating it. Each segment examines a different dimension of incident management: the role of centralized command, the risk of too many decision-makers, the importance of communication discipline, and how clearly defined roles allow teams to move faster under pressure.
The episode connects these ideas back to the Knight Capital incident, where the system continued operating while teams worked to understand and respond to the problem.
Together, these segments build toward a central insight:
War rooms don’t solve incidents. Structure does.
Bringing people together is not enough.
Without defined roles, authority, and communication discipline, coordination becomes noise.
And in fast systems, noise delays action.