Posts

How Can You Identify What Your Team Pretends Not to Know?

Image
How Can You Identify What Your Team Pretends Not to Know? The truth usually leaks before it is spoken. Framing the Question How can you identify what your team pretends not to know? Start by looking for the gap between what people privately adjust to and what they publicly name. Teams rarely hide obvious truths with a formal lie. More often, they build rituals around avoidance: careful wording, recurring exceptions, jokes that contain warnings, dashboards no one wants to interpret, and meetings where the same risk appears under a new label. The Truth Shows Up Before It Speaks You identify what your team pretends not to know by watching three things: what evidence keeps returning, what language gets softened, and what decisions never change. A team’s hidden knowledge usually leaves traces. The support team routes “edge cases” to one senior person because everyone knows the product flow is broken. Sales discounts the same feature gap every quarter while the roadmap calls it “positioning....

When Does a Question Open—or Close—a Conversation?

Image
When Does a Question Open—or Close—a Conversation? The grammar may be curious. The posture may not be. Framing the Question Questions that open conversation do more than produce answers: they make it possible for another person to add context, challenge a premise, or reveal what the asker could not already see. Yet a sentence ending in a question mark can also behave like a locked door: “Why would you do that?” “Don’t you think this is irresponsible?” The useful distinction is not open-ended versus closed-ended. It is whether the person answering has genuine room to change the conversation. A Question Opens When It Allows Revision A question opens a conversation when the asker is willing to be altered by the answer. It closes a conversation when the answer is being used as a confession, a compliance check, or decoration around a decision already made. That is why “What happened?” can be either generous or threatening. Asked by a colleague who wants to understand a missed handoff, it cr...

What Should You Be Saying No To?

Image
What Should You Be Saying No To? The hidden discipline behind focus, energy, and honest ambition. Framing the Question What should you be saying no to? It sounds like a productivity question, but it is really a question about trade-offs. Every “yes” spends attention, time, reputation, and energy. The tricky part is that many things worth refusing are not obviously bad. They are reasonable, flattering, useful, urgent, or socially expected. The Shadow Cost of Every Yes The direct answer: You should be saying no to the commitments, habits, requests, and identities that keep you technically busy but strategically unavailable. Not unavailable to other people. Unavailable to your real work. Unavailable to recovery. Unavailable to the relationships you claim matter. Unavailable to the difficult responsibility you keep postponing because your calendar gives you a respectable excuse. Most people treat “no” as a social technique. They ask, “How do I say this without disappointing someone?” That...

Why Assume the Inventor Is the Tool’s Best User?

Image
Why Assume the Inventor Is the Tool’s Best User? Making the thing and knowing how to work with it are not the same kind of intelligence. Framing the Question Why assume the inventor is the tool’s best user? It is a tempting shortcut because invention looks like authority. The person who built the thing must understand it better than anyone else, right? Sometimes yes. But often, inventing a tool and mastering its use require different relationships with reality. The inventor knows what the tool was designed to do. The best user learns what the tool actually does when the work gets messy. Origin Is Not Mastery The direct answer is: we assume the inventor is the best user because we confuse origin with mastery. The inventor has origin knowledge. They know the intention, structure, constraints, and imagined use case. That matters. But the best user has field knowledge. They know timing, context, exceptions, pressure, workarounds, and consequences. Those are not the same. A person can desig...