okay. and? the CTO isn't the last word in anything. if they are overruled to keep releasing new features, acquiring new users/clients, sales forward dev cycles, then the whole thing has potential to collapse under the weight of itself.
It's actually the job of the CEO to keep all of the c-suite people doing jobs. Doesn't seem to stop the CEO salary explosions.
Companies, after a disaster, focus lots of effort on that particular disaster, leaving all the other potential disasters unplanned for.
If you work at Webflow, you can anticipate LOTS of work in disaster recovery in the next 12 months. This has magically become a high priority for the CEO, who previously wanted features more than disaster recovery planning.
They will wait to focus massive resources on their security until after they get hacked.
It's actually the job of the CEO to keep all of the c-suite people doing jobs. Doesn't seem to stop the CEO salary explosions.