How Consumer Electronics Innovation Can Fix Incident Response in Entertainment SaaS (1/29)
A family-run entertainment SaaS company operates Lean with multiple teams of over fifty people each. They run a streaming platform for independent musicians. Musicians use the platform to upload tracks, manage releases, distribute to other streaming services, track royalties, and connect with fans. The company has 370 employees. Product development consists of 63 people split across eight teams: two backend, two frontend, one data, one infrastructure, one QA, and one DevOps (2/29)
. The husband and wife founders started fifteen years ago by building a simple upload tool for their own music. That tool grew into a platform serving 42,000 musicians and processing 215,000 streams per day. Incident response is a messy situation. When something breaks, nobody knows who is in charge. (3/29)
Last Thursday at 11 PM, the payment processing system went down. Musicians could not receive royalty payments. The on-call DevOps engineer got the alert. The engineer did not know whether the problem was in the payment gateway, the database, or the API. The engineer paged the backend team. The backend team was not on call. The backend team lead woke up at midnight. The lead spent two hours investigating. The problem turned out to be in the payment gateway (4/29)
. The gateway had changed its API without notice. The backend team lead fixed the integration. The fix took thirty minutes. But total resolution time was four hours and thirty minutes. Two of those hours were wasted investigation by the wrong team. Forty-six musicians complained on social media. Three threatened to leave. The incident response process needs change. (5/29)
Akio Morita built Sony on consumer electronics innovation. His model was straightforward. He did not invent new technology. He took existing technology and made it accessible. The Walkman is the best example. The Walkman used existing cassette technology. The innovation was in the packaging. Morita made the cassette player small enough to fit in a pocket. He made it personal. He made it portable. The technology was not new. The experience was new. (6/29)
Morita's approach was not just about product design. It was also about incident response. When Sony launched the Walkman, early units had a problem. The headphone jacks were loose. Headphones would disconnect when users moved. Customers reported the problem. Morita did not wait for a quarterly review. He gathered the engineering team the next day. The team diagnosed the issue in two hours. The problem was a tolerance issue in the jack housing. The team redesigned the housing (7/29)
. The fix was in production within one week. Total time from customer complaint to production fix was eight days.
The speed was possible because Morita had a clear incident response process. It had three steps. Step one: detect. The customer complaint was the detection. Step two: diagnose. The engineering team gathered and diagnosed in two hours. Step three: fix. The redesign and production took one week. The process was simple, fast, and repeatable. (8/29)
Morita applied the same thinking to every Sony product. When the Trinitron TV had a color calibration issue, the same three-step process detected, diagnosed, and fixed the problem in ten days. When the PlayStation had a disc read error at launch, the same three-step process detected, diagnosed, and fixed the problem in six days. The repeatable process created organizational confidence. Confidence created speed. Speed created customer trust. (9/29)
For an entertainment SaaS company, the incident response problem looks the same. Response is chaotic. Nobody knows who owns what. The wrong team investigates. Resolution takes too long. Customers complain. Morita's approach offers a clear answer: build a repeatable incident response process. Detect. Diagnose. Fix. Keep it simple. Keep it fast. Make it repeatable. That repeatability builds confidence. Confidence builds speed. Speed builds customer trust.
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The Core Principle (10/29)
Morita's consumer electronics innovation rested on one insight. Speed comes from repeatable processes, not from heroics. He did not fix the Walkman headphone jack by having one brilliant engineer work all night. He fixed it by having a clear three-step process that any team could follow. Detect. Diagnose. Fix. The process was simple, fast, and repeatable. (11/29)
For an entertainment SaaS company, the incident response problem has the same root cause. Response is chaotic because there is no repeatable process. The wrong team investigates because ownership is unclear. Resolution takes too long because there is no diagnosis step. Morita's approach says the fix is straightforward. Build a repeatable incident response process with three steps: detect, diagnose, fix. Keep it simple. Keep it fast. Make it repeatable. Repeatability eliminates chaos (12/29)