The Approval Pipeline — and the Slow Death of Human Care
The Fragrance of Failure
I once ruined of a premium jasmine-based eau de parfum because I insisted on a checklist. At the time, I was acting as a fragrance evaluator-a role that requires a mix of surgical precision and an almost mystical intuition. I had convinced the laboratory directors that our “nose,” the artisan responsible for the final titration, was too rogue, too informal.
He would add a drop of sandalwood or a milligram of synthetic musk based on the humidity of the room or the way the morning air smelled coming off the Grasse hillsides. I called it “undocumented risk.” I implemented a three-tier approval system: every adjustment had to be logged, peer-reviewed by a chemical safety officer, and signed off by the production manager before the vat could be stirred.
The result was a fragrance that was technically perfect, chemically stable, and utterly dead. By the time the sign-offs were gathered, the volatile top notes had begun their inevitable decay in the holding tanks. We didn’t save the batch from “risk”; we saved it from its own soul. I had traded the artisan’s responsiveness for a paper trail that proves we are doing our jobs while the product turned into expensive dish
