What's Actually Driving It
Observations on the underlying dynamics that founders keep mistaking for something else.
Check out our articles
You Don't Have a Productivity Problem. You Have a Clarity Problem
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Confident Is Not the Same as Capable
02.
The Business Can't Settle Because You Won't Let It
03.
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What Others Sense But Haven't Named Yet
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Articles \ What Others Sense But Haven't Named Yet \
Articles
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What Others Sense But Haven't Named Yet
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Articles \ What Others Sense But Haven't Named Yet \
join undercurrents
This is the kind of pattern I write about in Undercurrents — not tactics or frameworks, but the underlying dynamics that have been quietly running things before anyone thought to look there.
It goes out when something is worth saying. No noise in between.
You Don't Have a Productivity Problem. You Have a Clarity Problem
You bought the tool. The team got onboarded. And after a few weeks, everyone went back to paper, pen, and memory. The tool didn't fail — it showed you something. Productivity problems are usually clarity problems in disguise. And no amount of optimization fixes a misalignment that was never about the tool to begin with.
Confident Is Not the Same as Capable
The team bonding didn't work. The perks didn't work. And the good people kept leaving anyway. Not because they weren't valued — but because they could see clearly that nothing structural was going to change. The people most capable of fixing the problem are often the ones who leave because of it.
The Business Can't Settle Because You Won't Let It
The vacation has been postponed for years. There's always something — a situation, a client, a decision that only he can make. But after ten years, the question worth asking isn't when will things settle. It's what would it mean if they did. The chaos will continue as long as the chaos is needed. And that's not an operations problem.