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The Implementation Path: From Framework to Reality | Governed by Design #6 (Series Finale)

24 min · 20. maj 2026
episode The Implementation Path: From Framework to Reality | Governed by Design #6 (Series Finale) cover

Description

After five editions building a vocabulary for AI agent governance, the question that kept coming back was the same one. Where do we actually start? In this final edition of Governed by Design, hosts Alex and Jaime close the series with the Implementation Path, a framework for putting all five primitives into practice without a transformation program. You'll learn: * Why most AI governance efforts fail in a specific way, deployment moves and governance proposes * The compounding sequence: why the five primitives are sequential, not parallel, and why the order matters * The four operational moves, in order: Decision Boundary Contract → Oversight Trigger Matrix → Accountability Canvas → Handoff Receipt * The three traps that recur across organizations: policy-document, platform-first, perfect-framework * A twelve-week implementation sequence mapped to the May-August 2026 window before EU AI Act Article 26 enforcement begins * The minimum viable team structure, Compliance Officer, AI Lead, Engineer, that runs the work without a separate governance function * How to neutralize the four most common objections that stall implementation This edition synthesizes the entire series, the Governance Maturity Gap, Decision Boundary Contracts, the Oversight Spectrum, the Accountability Canvas, and Handoff Receipts into a single working framework you can ship one agent at a time. Key Insight: Governance isn't a program. It's a property of the architecture. A team that has built one boundary contract has more governance than a team with a hundred-page policy. A team that runs one accountability canvas has more clarity than a team with a steering committee. A team that produces one signed receipt has more evidence than a team with a year of unstructured logs. Resources mentioned in this episode:📄 Full edition with the worked example and twelve-week sequence: themohamedadam.substack.com 📥 Downloadable Implementation Playbook (aggregates all five primitive templates plus the sequencing checklist): themohamedadam.substack.com 📰 LinkedIn newsletter version: Search "Automate & Elevate" on LinkedIn 🔗 Website: aistreamlinehub.com The series, complete: Governed by Design ran for six editions on AI agent governance for compliance officers, AI leads, and CTOs in regulated environments.

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39 episodes

episode The Invisible Gap: What Article 26(5) Actually Deems Fulfilled | Governed by Design #9 artwork

The Invisible Gap: What Article 26(5) Actually Deems Fulfilled | Governed by Design #9

There's a sentence in Article 26(5) of the EU AI Act that reads like a gift to financial institutions: the monitoring obligation "shall be deemed to be fulfilled" by complying with the internal governance rules you already follow. Most institutions read it once, file it under relief, and move on. In this episode, Alex and Jaime give it the second reading, the one where the work starts. The carve-out is a bridge between two rulebooks, and a bridge carries load in both directions. You'll learn: * What "deemed fulfilled" actually routes, and the three things it does not do * Why the simplification is operational, not substantive: the burden moves from building another framework to proving the existing one reaches the agent * The scope clause most first readers skip: who the carve-out covers, and who it doesn't * Models vs. agents: why machinery built for periodic validation struggles with reasoning drift, autonomous tool use, and loops that close without a human * A walk across the bridge: one agentic fraud-detection system, two readings, two very different outcomes * The DORA span: one event, potentially two regimes, one incident pipeline, and the stacked invisible gaps if the agent is mapped into neither * The Perimeter Test: six questions, one honest hour, every "no" pre-formatted as a Gap Register entry * The announcement: the six primitives are becoming a book, and this episode is drawn from its second chapter Key Insight: The financial institution doesn't get a simpler AI Act. It gets an AI Act that assumes its existing governance is already excellent, and then holds it to that assumption. Nobody decided to leave the agent outside the governance perimeter. The perimeter was drawn around models before the agents arrived. The gap isn't in your policy, it's in your scope. Resources mentioned in this episode:📄 Full extended edition + downloadable Perimeter Test (six questions, one page, free): themohamedadam.substack.com📰 LinkedIn newsletter version: Search "Automate & Elevate" on LinkedIn🔗 Generate all six governance primitives, free: workspace.aistreamlinehub.com

Yesterday20 min
episode The Rehearsal: Proving You Can Stop the Agent Before You Have To | Governed by Design #8 artwork

The Rehearsal: Proving You Can Stop the Agent Before You Have To | Governed by Design #8

You filled in the Suspension Authority Ledger. A name, measurable triggers, an ordered notification chain. One question remains: is any of it true? In this episode, Alex and Jaime take Edition 7's sixth primitive from declaration to evidence. A ledger that has never been exercised isn't a control, it's a hypothesis about a control. And the first real test of a hypothesis shouldn't be a live incident. You'll learn: * Why every field of a ledger can be correct and the ledger can still fail on the day it matters * The Rehearsal Loop, five timestamped stations: simulate, detect, escalate, execute, notify * Why "Execute the suspension" is the station that finds expired credentials and missing permissions * A worked run: 26 minutes, two findings, the unconfigured alert rule and the read-only authority holder * How rehearsal findings feed the Gap Register (the sixth primitive strengthening the fifth) * The Tested field in full form, Date · Authority holder · Observer, and why two names are two different assurances * The 90-minute run-sheet: three roles, four pre-conditions, findings logged, not fixed * What suspension does to in-flight work: draining vs hard stop, idempotency, downstream timeouts * Why this plugs into the DORA resilience testing programme financial firms already run This edition pays off Edition 7's closing promise: the Tested field. Not a seventh primitive, one field added to the sixth, the field that separates a ledger somebody wrote from a ledger somebody proved. Key Insight: Documented capability and demonstrated capability diverge in exactly the moments that matter. A rehearsal moves every discovery to an afternoon you chose, instead of an incident you didn't. The first time you stop an agent shouldn't be the first time you try. Resources mentioned in this episode:📄 Full edition + downloadable Suspension Rehearsal Run-Sheet (90 minutes, one page): themohamedadam.substack.com📰 LinkedIn newsletter version: Search "Automate & Elevate" on LinkedIn🔗 Generate a full Article 26 governance profile, all six primitives, free: workspace.aistreamlinehub.com Coming next week: Edition 9, the tool edition. All six primitives assembled into a single governance profile, generated in fifteen minutes.

10. juli 202619 min
episode The Authority to Stop: Who Can Halt the Agent When It Goes Wrong | Governed by Design #7 artwork

The Authority to Stop: Who Can Halt the Agent When It Goes Wrong | Governed by Design #7

An AI agent is in production and starts doing the one thing it was built never to do. Who has the authority to stop it, right now, this afternoon? We closed this series at five primitives. This episode is about the sixth, the one the regulation and the real-world deployments kept pointing at. Hosts Alex and Jaime introduce the Suspension Authority Ledger and why most governance answers the wrong question. You'll learn: * Why "who approves the agent's decisions" and "who can pull it out of production" are different roles * The two layers: oversight intervenes in a decision; suspension withdraws the system's authority * Why the EU AI Act Omnibus extension moved the classification deadlines, but not the Article 26(5) duty to monitor and suspend, live from 2 August 2026 * The three fields of a Suspension Authority Ledger: a named authority (and backup), measurable triggers, and the notification chain * The difference between a technical kill switch and the governance record of who's authorized to use it * A worked example, a credit-triage agent halted in six minutes instead of a ten-minute blame spiral * Why an untested ledger is a document, not a control, and how to rehearse it This edition connects back to the Oversight Trigger Matrix (Edition 3) and the Accountability Canvas (Edition 4): the Canvas named owners for the agent's decisions; the Ledger names the owner for the agent's existence. Key Insight: Oversight asks, should a person check this action? Suspension asks, should this system still be running? Two different questions, two different owners. Most governance only writes down the first. Resources mentioned in this episode:📄 Full edition + the downloadable Suspension Authority Ledger template: themohamedadam.substack.com📰 LinkedIn newsletter version: Search "Automate & Elevate" on LinkedIn🔗 Website: aistreamlinehub.com - build a full profile at workspace.aistreamlinehub.com

1. juli 202620 min
episode The Implementation Path: From Framework to Reality | Governed by Design #6 (Series Finale) artwork

The Implementation Path: From Framework to Reality | Governed by Design #6 (Series Finale)

After five editions building a vocabulary for AI agent governance, the question that kept coming back was the same one. Where do we actually start? In this final edition of Governed by Design, hosts Alex and Jaime close the series with the Implementation Path, a framework for putting all five primitives into practice without a transformation program. You'll learn: * Why most AI governance efforts fail in a specific way, deployment moves and governance proposes * The compounding sequence: why the five primitives are sequential, not parallel, and why the order matters * The four operational moves, in order: Decision Boundary Contract → Oversight Trigger Matrix → Accountability Canvas → Handoff Receipt * The three traps that recur across organizations: policy-document, platform-first, perfect-framework * A twelve-week implementation sequence mapped to the May-August 2026 window before EU AI Act Article 26 enforcement begins * The minimum viable team structure, Compliance Officer, AI Lead, Engineer, that runs the work without a separate governance function * How to neutralize the four most common objections that stall implementation This edition synthesizes the entire series, the Governance Maturity Gap, Decision Boundary Contracts, the Oversight Spectrum, the Accountability Canvas, and Handoff Receipts into a single working framework you can ship one agent at a time. Key Insight: Governance isn't a program. It's a property of the architecture. A team that has built one boundary contract has more governance than a team with a hundred-page policy. A team that runs one accountability canvas has more clarity than a team with a steering committee. A team that produces one signed receipt has more evidence than a team with a year of unstructured logs. Resources mentioned in this episode:📄 Full edition with the worked example and twelve-week sequence: themohamedadam.substack.com 📥 Downloadable Implementation Playbook (aggregates all five primitive templates plus the sequencing checklist): themohamedadam.substack.com 📰 LinkedIn newsletter version: Search "Automate & Elevate" on LinkedIn 🔗 Website: aistreamlinehub.com The series, complete: Governed by Design ran for six editions on AI agent governance for compliance officers, AI leads, and CTOs in regulated environments.

20. maj 202624 min