PLAYBOOK · 7 MIN READ

DACI vs RACI vs RAPID — and when you need more

All three frameworks answer the same question — who plays what part in a decision — with different emphasis. Here’s what each one actually means, where each fits, and where every framework stops.

TRACEWAY GUIDES · UPDATED JUNE 2026

RACI — task responsibility, adapted to decisions

Responsible · Accountable · Consulted · Informed. RACI is the oldest of the three and wasn’t designed for decisions at all — it’s a responsibility-assignment matrix for tasks and deliverables. Exactly one person is Accountable; others execute, advise, or are kept in the loop. Teams adapt it to decisions because it’s familiar, but it has no concept of a decision being made — only of work being owned.

DACI — RACI rebuilt for decisions

Driver · Approver · Contributors · Informed. DACI emerged at Intuit in the 1980s as a decision-focused variant of RACI. The Driver moves the decision forward; one Approver makes the call; Contributors bring knowledge; Informed hear the outcome. Its core virtue is the single named approver — decisions stall when approval is ambient.

RAPID® — decision rights for big organisations

Recommend · Agree · Perform · Input · Decide. RAPID was developed by Bain & Company and popularised in the 2006 Harvard Business Review article “Who Has the D?”. It separates the people who recommend from the one who decides, gives a deliberately narrow veto to Agree (typically legal or compliance), and names who must perform the outcome. It shines in large organisations where recommendation and decision authority sit in different places. (RAPID® is a registered trademark of Bain & Company.)

Side by side

RACIDACIRAPID®
Built forTasks & deliverablesDecisionsDecision rights at scale
Single deciderAccountable (implied)Approver (explicit)Decide (explicit)
Veto conceptNoNoYes — Agree (narrow)
Execution roleResponsibleNoPerform
Best fitProject plansProduct & team decisionsCross-functional, regulated, large orgs

Where every framework stops

A framework is a naming convention. It tells you who should play which part — and then trusts slides, docs, and goodwill to make it happen. In practice:

What a seven-role model adds

DACERIO — Traceway’s approval model — extends the decision-rights idea to seven roles: Driver, Approver, Consulted, Enabler, Reviewer, Informed, Owner. The additions cover what the classic frameworks leave implicit: an Enabler who clears blockers and provides resources, a Reviewer who checks the record before sign-off, and an Owner accountable for the decision’s life after approval — because decisions don’t end when they’re made.

Run whichever framework fits. Traceway uses DACERIO as its default, but you can run RACI, DACI, RAPID, or your own labels — the difference is that the software enforces the roles, routes approvals by decision type, and writes every step to a tamper-evident trail. The framework stops being a poster and becomes a workflow.

Stop losing the why.

Traceway is the system of record for decisions — AI capture, real governance, an audit-grade trail, and a chain from strategy to the work. Coming 2026.

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