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I’m an undisciplined person. My habit of reading books about habit-formation is stronger than any of the habits they’ve helped me form.

Perhaps because of this, I’m interested in the idea of keystone habits - “a small and manageable shift or change that acts as a catalyst for success in many other areas of your life”. For example, sleep and exercise tend to have positive knock-on effects, and make it easier to keep to other habits.

What do you think is the single most effective keystone habit for a team, i.e. the team habit that catalyses the most positive knock-on effects?

My vote goes to the Postmortem.

Every time something goes wrong, or could have gone better, run a blameless, five-whys-inspired Postmortem to figure out how you could improve going forwards.

Though it's not exactly fun to ask how we can improve when something goes wrong, it can be a very cathartic experience. Done well, you can simultaneously reinforce psychological safety and continuous improvement, both of which are central to becoming a high-functioning team.

Here’s how to run a Postmortem well.

Before the session

  1. Wait for something to go wrong:

2. Create a Google Doc based on this public read-only Postmortem template, with the following main sections:

3. Read Blameless PostMortems and a Just Cultureto set the right emotional tone.

4. Read Lessons Learned: Five Whysto get people mulling about root causes.

5. Point invitees to the Postmortem GDoc you just created, and ask them to contribute to the 'What happened?' section, so that you have a full description. Chase them before the meeting to make sure it’s a clear and full description of the incident or problem.

In the session itself

  1. Open by reiterating the principles of the Blameless Postmortem:

Our goal is not to point the finger of blame at anyone, or to spend much time regretting what we wish we had done differently. Our goal is to understand how our overall system and process as a team broke down, and what we can learn from this so that we can improve going forwards.

The Postmortem magic only works if you and everyone else actually live by this, so I intone it out loud at the beginning of every single Postmortem like a mantra.

2. Review the 'what happened' section quickly out loud

Tweak it until everyone agrees the description is accurate and complete. Defer any discussion about why it happened or what to do next.

3. Now it’s time to understand why

4. Identify ways you can improve things going forwards

5. Decide who you’re going to tell

After the session

Follow up

A good Postmortem is one of the very most valuable discussions a team can have.

As Eric Ries says, they compound over time. They direct your attention to the recurring problems that need to be prioritised. If you make even a few improvements after each Postmortem, you’ll be surprised how quickly you end up pretty bulletproof.