Decision Drift describes the progressive alteration of a decision’s original intent during execution.
A decision does not fail only when it is reversed.
It fails when its scope, constraints, timing, or authority conditions mutate without explicit redesign.
As decisions move across organizational layers, translation replaces precision.
Urgency compresses nuance.
Interpretation introduces variance.
Local optimization overrides systemic alignment.
What is executed may no longer reflect what was structurally approved.
Decision Drift is rarely abrupt.
It accumulates incrementally through micro-adjustments, reinterpretations, and boundary erosion.
Under pressure, drift accelerates.
Left unchecked, it becomes structural distortion.

Execution Systems, Engineered to Hold Under Pressure
Behavioral Engineering for Decision Stability