Catalog
concept#Governance#Delivery#Architecture#Software Engineering

Decision Scope

Defines which decisions may be made at which organizational level and who is accountable for them.

Decision Scope defines the responsibility and decision boundaries between teams, roles and organizational levels.
Established
Medium

Classification

  • Medium
  • Organizational
  • Organizational
  • Intermediate

Technical context

Jira/issue tracker for tracking decisionsConfluence or wiki for documentationGit repositories for architecture and ADR documents

Principles & goals

Establish clear responsibilities first.Make local decisions where competence and information reside.Document escalation paths and governance boundaries.
Discovery
Enterprise, Domain, Team

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Over-centralization due to overly narrow scopes.
  • Conflicts from unclear escalation rules.
  • Delays when responsibilities are not maintained.
  • Regularly review scopes in retrospectives.
  • Record responsibilities clearly in team charters.
  • Document decisions with rationale and date.

I/O & resources

  • Organization and role overview
  • Strategic goals and roadmap
  • Existing policies and standards
  • Documented decision scopes
  • Escalation and communication rules
  • Accountability matrix

Description

Decision Scope defines the responsibility and decision boundaries between teams, roles and organizational levels. It specifies which decisions can be taken locally and which require higher-level governance. Clear scope definitions reduce coordination effort, speed up delivery and improve accountability. They also enable escalation paths and prioritization.

  • Reduced coordination effort between teams.
  • Faster delivery through decentralized decisions.
  • Improved accountability and traceability.

  • Requires maintained organizational and role models.
  • Not all decisions can be cleanly bounded.
  • Incorrect scope definitions can reinforce silos.

  • Decision lead time

    Average time from decision need to completion.

  • Escalation rate

    Share of cases escalated to higher-level bodies.

  • Decision traceability

    Share of documented decisions with rationale and owner.

Team A decides on UI changes

A frontend team makes local layout decisions as long as no API changes are required.

Architecture team decides on database migration

Database migration is assigned to the domain architecture body because it has system-wide impact.

Product management prioritizes features

Product management makes prioritization decisions based on scope rules and strategic relevance.

1

Analyze existing decision areas and stakeholders.

2

Define scope boundaries and escalation paths.

3

Document and publish in a central wiki.

4

Regularly review and adjust scopes.

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Missing central documentation of scopes.
  • Outdated accountability matrices.
  • Unclear interface definitions between teams.
Cross-team coordinationAmbiguous ownershipOver-centralization
  • Teams delegate critical security decisions without escalation.
  • Using scope as an excuse for lack of collaboration.
  • Rigid scope without adjustment to changing goals.
  • Too rigid boundaries prevent necessary coordination.
  • Not assigning clear documentation responsibility.
  • Overloading governance bodies with too many escalations.
Moderation and facilitation skillsBasic knowledge of governance and organization designDocumentation and communication skills
Clear ownership of interfacesScalability of decision processesReusability of technical solutions
  • Regulatory requirements for safety-critical decisions
  • Limited capacity of governance bodies
  • Inter-domain dependencies