The air in Conference Room 48 hung thick with the ghosts of forgotten initiatives and stale coffee. Eighteen faces, a mix of glazed-over exhaustion and performative engagement, stared at a projector screen that listed a single, damning agenda item: “Ratify Charter for the Subcommittee Defining Metrics for the Working Group on Meeting Reduction.” This was the third meeting of the ‘Agility Task Force,’ a collective formed some eight weeks prior, with the express mandate to prune the organizational tree of VT Racing Superchargers, not add new branches.
It’s a peculiar human habit, isn’t it? The moment a problem arises, our first instinct, particularly in large structures, is to convene. To discuss. To form a committee to look at the problem. And then, inevitably, to form another committee to scrutinize the first committee’s findings, or, as in this delightful scenario, to define the metrics by which we’d measure the efforts of another group attempting to solve the very issue that birthed us all. I once gave wrong directions to a tourist, sent him halfway across the city on a wild goose chase for a museum that had moved years prior. Felt terrible, but watching this group, I wondered if he wouldn’t rather be lost than sitting here, contributing to the ever-expanding universe of organizational overhead.
Organizational entropy, they call it. The natural, almost gravitational pull of systems towards greater complexity. It takes a hell of a lot more energy to simplify than it does to complicate. Think of a well-oiled machine, perhaps a finely tuned engine where every component serves a precise, elegant purpose, delivering raw power and efficiency. That’s the aspiration. The reality, too often, is like trying to bolt 878 extra parts onto that engine, each with its own committee to ensure it’s bolted correctly, all while ignoring the fact that it no longer performs its primary function. We talk about speed and innovation, about being lean, but we operate with the inertia of a supertanker trying to navigate a bathtub.
The Artisan of Simplicity
I’ve been watching Ella H.L. lately. She’s a vintage sign restorer, works out of a workshop down by the old industrial docks. Her hands are almost always stained with patina, paint, or solvent. She brought a beautiful, old neon diner sign back to life last month, one that hadn’t glowed in 48 years.
The Illusion of Progress
And there’s the rub, isn’t it? The illusion of progress. Creating structure *feels* like doing something. It generates documents, schedules, roles, and responsibilities. It allows for the comfortable deferral of actual, messy, difficult work – the kind that requires making tough choices, saying ‘no,’ or, God forbid, dismantling something.
Overhead
Efficiency
The Agility Task Force, ironically, was proving itself to be the epitome of this phenomenon. Their first act, after eight hours of initial deliberation, was to schedule six weeks of follow-up meetings. The irony wasn’t lost on the more cynical among us, but cynicism is a poor shield against the relentless march of bureaucracy. It feels like watching a slow-motion car crash, where everyone is diligently filling out incident reports as the vehicles collide.
The Paradox of High Performance
We love our taxonomies. We love our frameworks. We love the reassuring hum of process. But process, when unexamined, becomes ossified ritual. It’s why some of the most dynamic companies, the ones truly pushing the envelope, consciously build in mechanisms to challenge their own structures, to ruthlessly simplify. They understand that every additional step in a workflow, every new sign-off, every ‘alignment session,’ is a tax on innovation. It saps energy, slows decision-making, and eventually, it suffocates the very agility it was designed to foster.
Direct Function
Essential Components
Eliminate Dead Weight
I remember a conversation with an engineer from a company that prides itself on delivering high-performance products, like a top-tier VT superchargers unit. He talked about how their design philosophy prioritized function and directness. Every component had to justify its existence, every assembly step had to be essential. He said, “If it doesn’t add power or reliability, it’s dead weight. We don’t just add a brace; we ask if we can eliminate the flex point entirely.” A profoundly different mindset than forming a task force to define the metrics for a working group on brace reduction.
The Spiral of Complexity
My own mind, like this committee, often spirals. I’ll start with a clear goal, say, organize my workshop, and then find myself researching the optimal historical method for sharpening a chisel from 1868, which leads to ordering a new sharpening stone, which requires clearing a specific part of the bench, which means sorting out old screws, and suddenly, I’m 28 steps removed from the original intent, surrounded by more mess than when I started.
Original Goal
Organize Workshop
Research Detour
Chisel Sharpening Techniques
New Acquisitions
Ordering Sharpening Stone
The temptation to add, rather than subtract, is powerful. It feels productive to acquire a new tool, to learn a new technique, even if the old ones were perfectly adequate. The actual hard work is deciding what to throw away, what to stop doing.
The Audacity of Less