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Principle 16:
Every Route Must Conclude

Every OneRoute must include an explicit Conclude step that defines what “done” means.


Without a defined end state, work cannot be governed, measured, reused, or truly completed — closure makes outcomes clear, accountable, and comparable.

Plain-English Summary

A OneRoute that does not explicitly end cannot be analyzed, governed, or improved. Every route must include a Conclude step that defines what ‘done’ means.

What this Principle Means

Conclude marks a defined end state. Without it, work can drift, repeat indefinitely, or silently hand off to something else. OneRoute requires closure so outcomes are measurable and comparable.

Why Closure Matters

Many failures occur not because work was done incorrectly, but because it never truly finished. Explicit conclusion allows accountability, learning, and reuse.

What Conclude Represents

  • A stable end condition

  • A handoff point to another route

  • Completion of responsibility for this sequence

Concrete Examples

Human process: Ticket is resolved and closed.


Observed reality: Work stops but no one knows who owns the outcome.


Natural phenomena: System reaches equilibrium.

Mini Case: The Never-Ending Task

A task keeps resurfacing in meetings. Mapping shows no Conclude—only repeated Actions and Decisions. Defining a conclusion eliminates ambiguity.

 

How to Apply This Principle

  1. Ask what ‘done’ means for this route.

  2. Define the condition explicitly.

  3. Insert a Conclude step when that condition is met.

  4. If work continues, it is a new route.

Common Misunderstandings

  • Assuming work ends naturally

  • Confusing pauses with completion

  • Treating handoffs as implicit

Quick Diagnostic Questions

  • Where does responsibility end?

  • How do we know this route is finished?

  • What happens immediately after conclusion?

If You Only Remember One Thing

If you cannot point to the end, the route is incomplete.

Canonical Statement

Every OneRoute includes an explicit conclusion.

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