DG-STD-v3.0 · Open Standard · Free · No License Required

The moment responsibility
enters the system.

Decision Gate is a deliberate pause before action — a structured moment where every consequential decision is made consciously, with clear ownership and visible accountability.

Why it exists

Bad outcomes are rarely execution failures. They are decision failures. Work starts before a decision is made. Tasks are assigned, features are built, systems are deployed — because someone assumed it was already decided. When things go wrong, the failure has no owner.

01 — Execution without decision
Work starts before a decision is made

Speed is rewarded. Asking "should we?" feels like friction. Tasks move forward on assumption, not commitment.

02 — Accountability diffusion
When no one decides, no one owns the outcome

Responsibility spreads across teams, roles, and meetings until it disappears entirely.

03 — AI amplifies both
Automation removes the human pause entirely

Without a gate, the absence of a decision moment becomes a feature of the architecture.

What it is — and what it is not

Decision Gate is NOT
  • Backlog refinement or sprint planning
  • A review or approval meeting
  • Managerial consent (verbal or email)
  • A compliance checklist
  • Bureaucracy or governance overhead
Decision Gate IS
  • A conscious decision act before action
  • Named ownership of an outcome
  • A logged, dated, attributed record
  • The question: should we do this?
  • The pause that restores responsibility

If a decision has impact — it requires a gate.

Gate outcomes

Every gate produces exactly one outcome. See full outcome reference →

GO
Proceed

All conditions met, owner named and logged. Execution may begin.

CHANGE
Adjust first

Decision has merit but requires modification. Return to the gate.

PAUSE
Wait for clarity

Insufficient information. Define what is missing and set a return date.

KILL
Stop completely

This decision should not be made. Resources released. Path closed.

Apply it today — no setup required.

No tools · No certification · No infrastructure