The Invisible Weight: Why We Optimize Everything But the Work
My fingers, stiff from four consecutive hours of tracing flowcharts on a greasy whiteboard, protested with every click. The air in the conference room, thick with the scent of recycled ambition and lukewarm coffee, had done little to sharpen our focus. We’d just endured an entire day, a full eight hours, at an offsite dedicated to ‘streamlining workflows,’ and the tangible output was a new, vastly more complicated spreadsheet. It was designed to track every micro-action, promising clarity, but I knew, with the certainty of someone who’d seen this script play out over four dozen times, that by next Tuesday it would be an ignored digital relic.
Success Rate
Success Rate
This isn’t just an observation; it’s a core frustration, a persistent ache in the corporate world. We’ve become masters of process, constructing elaborate project management tools – I can count at least four different platforms actively in use across our various teams. We conduct daily stand-ups that run for a solid 24 minutes, weekly reviews that stretch for an hour and 44 minutes, and retrospective meetings that are always scheduled for 44 minutes, even though they invariably spill over. Yet, despite this dizzying array of oversight, the actual work – the raw, unglamorous act of production – remains a chaotic, inefficient mess.
The Cycle of Managerialism
Our obsession with ‘process optimization’ has morphed into a goal in itself, a self-sustaining organism feeding on our
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