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Of Course It Went Wrong
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8 The Disingenuous ObjectorObjections are sometimes used to mask fear, confusion, or disengagement.
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When success becomes invisible and only failures generate attention, teams misread the situation and overreact.
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When a system is under strain, it rejects the very investments that would relieve that strain.
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101 Parkinson’s LawWork expands to fill the time and space available, regardless of actual need.
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Past success quietly narrows what feels possible, turning experience into a constraint just when change is needed.
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When fear of being wrong is reframed as caution, decisions stall until events force a worse outcome.
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104 Decisions Follow the Path of Least ResistanceIn the absence of challenge or clarity, decisions default to momentum, authority, or the fastest voices.
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105 The Cost of Unsaid ThingsWhat goes unspoken does not disappear; it accumulates and resurfaces later with greater force.
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106 Competence Hides Until TestedCapability remains invisible until pressure forces it into view.
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107 Fear Accelerates Bad BehaviourStress shortens thinking and sharpens selfish instincts.
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108 Delay Has a BiasWaiting is rarely neutral and usually favours the status quo.
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109 People Optimise for SurvivalMost behaviour makes sense when viewed as self-preservation.
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When people are uncomfortable with change but cannot say so, they object on many reasonable grounds and stop progress without ever naming the real concern.
Of Course It Went Right
In progress
27 chapters on what success actually looks like and why it is never accidental. Subscribe below to hear when they land.