Your Standards Exist. They Just Aren't Followed.
This title could be clearer and more informative.Try out Clickbait Shieldfor free (5 uses left this month).
Engineering standards fail not because they don't exist, but because manual coordination can't keep pace with AI-assisted coding, stack diversity, and continuous deployment. Advisory documentation and periodic audits are reactive and optional at the moment of change. Policy-as-code is the right direction, but the real bottleneck isn't writing policies—it's collecting and normalizing SDLC data across diverse repos, CI systems, and toolchains. What's needed is a control system that continuously gathers signals, normalizes them into a schema, evaluates guardrails on every PR, and enforces standards where change happens. This shifts enforcement from human coordination to automated feedback loops, turning postmortems into lasting mitigations and compliance into a byproduct of development.
Table of contents
The phase changeWhy the old approaches breakThe real bottleneckWhat a real control system looks likeThree examples of why this mattersIntroducing Earthly LunarSort: