I intentionally say "Move slow and fix things" as the rejection of "Move fast and break things", as opposed to the more popular "Move deliberately and fix things".
Because I want, very specifically, for *slow* to be seen as a virtue. Slow gives time for people whose entire life focus isn't what we're working on to react to changes, provide feedback that change is breaking things for them, participate in consensus process moving forward.
@dalias I use “carefully” for the same reason (and have stickers to match).
@krusynth I still prefer "slow" because a lot of people insist you can be "careful" fast, and you can't. A lot of the people influenced by whatever you're doing won't even see it until years later, much less have an opportunity to have their needs considered.
@dalias I mean, I work for gov, so by that logic “slow” doesn’t indicate to me that anyone is taken into account either. We do most things slow and poorly.