At my $DAYJOB, we are always careful to figure out exactly what happened, including by whom. It's not to assign personal blame, but I believe it's critical that everyone agrees on the facts (who, what, when, where, and [if possible] why).
Response and conversation is always focused on "how do we prevent this in the future?", not on punishing whoever was involved in the past.
IOW, I agree with I believe is your intent, but differ on the implementation. Blameless transparency is the term we use (and we probably stole that from somewhere else).
It's a very powerful signal to the whole team when you first see individuals "admitting" to exactly what they did, how it caused or contributed to the outage, and to hear them thanked for their contribution of understanding in the post-mortem.
Senior leadership (including myself, who originally instituted the entire process a decade ago) is very clear that we want to know the facts and that in seeking and using those facts, we're only focused on the future, no matter how boneheaded the individual actions appear with the benefit of hindsight and knowledge that they'd lead (in)directly to an outage. I run operations and also participate in the promotion discussions for all technologists, and in 11 years, I've never heard a negative shadow cast onto a sysadmin/sysengineer from their actions during or leading to a production outage. And we've (collectively) made our fair share of mistakes over the years. That doesn't stop good employees from feeling bad about it, but that's a personal feeling they have, not from the fear of it being a professional black mark.
Response and conversation is always focused on "how do we prevent this in the future?", not on punishing whoever was involved in the past.
IOW, I agree with I believe is your intent, but differ on the implementation. Blameless transparency is the term we use (and we probably stole that from somewhere else).
It's a very powerful signal to the whole team when you first see individuals "admitting" to exactly what they did, how it caused or contributed to the outage, and to hear them thanked for their contribution of understanding in the post-mortem.
Senior leadership (including myself, who originally instituted the entire process a decade ago) is very clear that we want to know the facts and that in seeking and using those facts, we're only focused on the future, no matter how boneheaded the individual actions appear with the benefit of hindsight and knowledge that they'd lead (in)directly to an outage. I run operations and also participate in the promotion discussions for all technologists, and in 11 years, I've never heard a negative shadow cast onto a sysadmin/sysengineer from their actions during or leading to a production outage. And we've (collectively) made our fair share of mistakes over the years. That doesn't stop good employees from feeling bad about it, but that's a personal feeling they have, not from the fear of it being a professional black mark.