
WHAT’S REALLY GOING WRONG
At the core, most CoEs are trying to control a high-speed platform with slow, manual processes.
The result is a system that looks structured but behaves unpredictably. Makers are slowed down, architects are overloaded, and risk is pushed into places no one is monitoring.
WHAT NEEDS TO CHANGE
The shift isn’t about adding more rules or more reviewers. It’s about changing how governance works at a fundamental level. Instead of relying on people to enforce standards, those standards need to be built directly into the platform. The system should guide behavior automatically, blocking risky actions and allowing safe ones without delay. This changes everything. Low-risk solutions can move instantly. High-risk scenarios still get the attention they need. And most importantly, governance becomes consistent. It no longer depends on who is reviewing something or how tired they are that day.
THE FIVE PATTERNS YOU’LL RECOGNIZE
Throughout the episode, we walk through the patterns that show up in almost every failed CoE. You’ll hear how documentation-based governance creates a false sense of control, why approval boards actually increase risk, and how environment sprawl turns tenants into unmanaged chaos. We also look at the hidden danger of orphaned automations and why most reporting dashboards completely miss the point. Each of these issues on its own is manageable. Together, they create a system that simply cannot scale.
THE PIVOT
The future CoE isn’t a committee. It’s a control plane. That means governance is always on. Decisions happen in real time. The platform enforces the rules automatically, and humans focus only on the scenarios that truly require judgment. This approach doesn’t just improve efficiency. It changes how the business experiences IT. Instead of being seen as a blocker, the CoE becomes an enabler. A system that makes the right path the easiest one to follow.
FINAL THOUGHT
The organizations I audited weren’t failing because they lacked control. They were failing because they applied control too late, in the wrong place, and in the wrong way. If your model still depends on manual approvals for everyday solutions, you’re not governing the platform. You’re slowing it down and hoping nothing breaks. It’s time to move away from the velvet rope. And start building the paved road.
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