Overview

RTT‑Inside mapping onto public‑private fab governance structures

Public‑private fab governance fails when stakeholders share funding but not a shared definition of success. RTT‑Inside helps by turning governance into a stateful, traceable, purpose‑declared system—so decisions remain defensible under scrutiny and ramps don’t get distorted by optics.


Governance layers and RTT‑Inside anchors#

Governance layer Typical governance artifact RTT‑Inside anchor
Public funder Grant/award terms, milestones MEANING: declare public purpose + success criteria
Private operator Operating plan, yield targets BEING: fab condition; TIME: learning trajectory
Supply chain Vendor MSAs, qualification gates KNOWING: provenance + decision lineage across suppliers
Workforce & community Hiring, training commitments BEING: readiness; TIME: learning velocity + retention
Oversight Audits, hearings, PR updates ARTIFACT: human‑readable narratives tied to lineage

1️⃣ MEANING applied to governance purpose, not slogans#

RTT‑Inside starts by forcing a Meaning Declaration that all parties sign onto, written in plain language and measurable terms.

  • Public meaning examples: domestic capability, resilience, workforce development, long-horizon competitiveness
  • Private meaning examples: sustainable yield, stable economics, IP protection, global product continuity
  • Alignment rule: every milestone must map to at least one declared purpose (no “vanity milestones”)

This prevents the classic split where public narratives demand instant output while technical reality requires multi‑year stabilization.


2️⃣ BEING applied to oversight condition, not headline output#

Replace “Are we at target yield yet?” with a shared Fab Condition view that leadership and oversight can read without weaponizing it.

  • Infrastructure condition: power/water/air/vibration stability margins
  • Process condition: stability health by module (litho/etch/depo/metrology)
  • Workforce condition: readiness, coverage, fatigue risk, escalation health
  • Supplier condition: qualification state, lead-time stress, substitution risk

Governance becomes about operating condition and risk posture, not political theater.


3️⃣ KNOWING applied to cross-party traceability and accountability#

RTT‑Inside governance treats the fab as a fork: local conditions will force deviations. The question becomes whether deviations are traceable and teachable.

  • Decision lineage: why choices were made (tradeoffs, constraints, alternatives)
  • Provenance lineage: tool/process/material changes and their downstream effects
  • Incident lineage: excursions → response → corrective actions → verified learning

Accountability shifts from “who failed” to “what did we learn, and is it preserved.”


4️⃣ TIME applied to milestone design so ramps can’t be politicized#

RTT‑Inside insists milestones include trajectory metrics, not just end states.

  • Learning velocity: variance reduction rate, process window convergence rate
  • Recovery rate: time-to-stable after excursions
  • Resilience trend: robustness under normal operational stress
  • Maintenance debt: tools, facilities, training, documentation

This makes it legitimate to say: “We are on a healthy ramp curve,” even when absolute yield isn’t yet comparable to a mature reference fab.


Governance operating model with RTT‑Inside#

Shared artifacts#

  • MeaningDeclaration: public + private purposes and success criteria
  • BeingState dashboard: condition snapshots across infra/process/workforce/supply chain
  • KnowingEvent log: append‑only decision and incident lineage (with redaction boundaries for IP)
  • TimeSignal report: ramp trajectory metrics and stability trends
  • Artifact brief: one-page narrative that ties claims to lineage

Shared cadence#

  • Weekly: BEING (condition) + KNOWING (top learnings)
  • Monthly: TIME (trajectory health) + risk posture updates
  • Quarterly: MEANING alignment review (are we still optimizing for what we said matters?)

The key governance payoff#

RTT‑Inside lets public and private stakeholders disagree on priorities without breaking the system, because they’re anchored to shared primitives: condition, lineage, purpose, and time. That’s how you preserve trust while the fab does what fabs must do—learn.


Slide 1 — Why Fab Governance Breaks Under Pressure#

The challenge

  • Public and private stakeholders share funding, not definitions of success
  • Ramps get judged by headlines instead of system health
  • Pressure distorts learning and decision‑making

RTT‑Inside insight

Governance fails when state, knowledge, and purpose are invisible.

What RTT‑Inside provides

  • A shared language for progress
  • Defensible accountability
  • Pressure‑resistant transparency

Slide 2 — RTT‑Inside Governance Framework (At a Glance)#

Four shared primitives

  • BEING — current condition
  • KNOWING — decision lineage
  • MEANING — declared purpose
  • TIME — trajectory, not deadlines

Why this matters

  • Aligns public and private expectations
  • Prevents politicization of technical reality
  • Preserves trust during ramp uncertainty

Slide 3 — MEANING: Align Purpose Before Pressure Builds#

Problem

  • Public goals: sovereignty, jobs, resilience
  • Private goals: yield, economics, IP
  • Misalignment creates conflict during ramp

RTT‑Inside solution

  • Joint Meaning Declaration
  • Plain‑language success criteria
  • Every milestone maps to a declared purpose

Executive takeaway

If purpose is explicit, tradeoffs are defensible.


Slide 4 — BEING: Govern Condition, Not Headlines#

Problem

  • Oversight focuses on yield snapshots
  • Early ramps look like “failure” by design

RTT‑Inside solution

  • Shared Fab Condition View
    • Infrastructure health
    • Process stability
    • Workforce readiness
    • Supply‑chain stress

Executive takeaway

Condition is harder to politicize than output.


Slide 5 — KNOWING: Accountability Without Blame#

Problem

  • Deviations framed as mistakes
  • Knowledge fractures across geography and partners

RTT‑Inside solution

  • Append‑only Decision Lineage
  • Traceable tradeoffs and constraints
  • Incident learning preserved, not buried

Executive takeaway

Accountability improves when learning is visible.


Slide 6 — TIME: Replace Deadlines with Trajectories#

Problem

  • Ramps judged by dates and comparisons
  • Learning curves ignored

RTT‑Inside solution

  • Trajectory metrics:
    • Learning velocity
    • Recovery time
    • Variance reduction
    • Resilience growth

Executive takeaway

Trajectories tell the truth; dates invite theater.


Slide 7 — Governance Operating Model#

Shared artifacts

  • Meaning Declaration
  • Fab Condition Dashboard
  • Decision & Incident Lineage Log
  • Ramp Trajectory Report
  • One‑page Narrative Artifact

Shared cadence

  • Weekly: condition & learning
  • Monthly: trajectory & risk posture
  • Quarterly: purpose alignment review

Slide 8 — What RTT‑Inside Changes for Leadership#

Enables

  • Honest communication without alarmism
  • Accountability without fear
  • Learning without blame
  • Progress without political escalation

Does NOT

  • Lower standards
  • Hide problems
  • Delay outcomes

Executive takeaway

RTT‑Inside replaces pressure with clarity.


Slide 9 — Final Leadership Message#

Public‑private fabs succeed when governance tracks
condition, learning, purpose, and time — not just output.

RTT‑Inside makes that alignment visible, defensible, and durable.