Question
Why does monitoring fatigue fail?
Quick Answer
Adding more monitoring to fix missed signals. When you notice that something slipped through your monitoring, the instinct is to add another dashboard, another notification, another daily check. But the reason you missed the signal was not insufficient data — it was attentional saturation. Adding.
The most common reason monitoring fatigue fails: Adding more monitoring to fix missed signals. When you notice that something slipped through your monitoring, the instinct is to add another dashboard, another notification, another daily check. But the reason you missed the signal was not insufficient data — it was attentional saturation. Adding more monitoring to an already-saturated system makes the problem worse, not better. Each new alert further dilutes attention across a wider surface, accelerating the very fatigue that caused the miss.
The fix: List every metric, dashboard, notification, and check-in you currently use to monitor your cognitive agents (habits, systems, workflows, goals). Count them. Now force-rank them: which three, if they turned red, would demand immediate action? Move those three to a single surface you see daily. Archive everything else into a weekly or monthly review cadence. Run this reduced configuration for two weeks and note whether your response rate to genuine signals improves.
The underlying principle is straightforward: Too much monitoring data overwhelms attention and leads to ignoring signals that matter. The solution is not more data — it is fewer, sharper signals routed to the right layer of attention.
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