Essays
Green Dashboards Hide Red Realities: Because nobody brags about being “mostly yellow”
Green dashboards give comfort but often hide reality. They reward vanity metrics and create the illusion of progress, while urgency slips away unnoticed. Leadership in times of uncertainty means looking beyond the green, embracing the yellow signals, and acting on what’s uncomfortable instead of celebrating what looks perfect. Progress is messy, inconvenient, and full of friction. Leaders who face that mess head-on are the ones who actually move things forward.
The Cult of Busyness: Why We Choose Safety Over Substance
Most of what we call progress is just motion. Leaders hide in busyness because it feels safer than focus: full calendars, fast replies, and endless lists look like work but dodge consequence. Three studies show why: we fear idleness, we mistake effort for value, and we refresh inboxes like slot machines. The result? Empty rituals that protect us from failure but deliver nothing. Real leadership means subtraction, sharper filters, and bruises. Because progress always leaves a mark. If no one feels it, it wasn’t progress.
The Illusion of Progress: Why we are Addicted to Activity but Starving for Outcomes
Most of what we call progress is just motion. Like Skinner’s pigeons pecking for pellets, we keep pressing buttons... emails, dashboards, tickets... mistaking activity for achievement. The comfort of busyness feels safe because it produces signals we can count, charts we can show, and rituals that look productive. But these are illusions. Fake wins hijack energy, distract from outcomes, and slowly make leaders worse. Real progress looks different: it’s narrow, uncomfortable, and leaves a bruise when it’s absent. If no one feels it, it wasn’t progress.
Unpacking the Sandwich: How AI is Really Teaching Us to Collaborate
Great leadership isn’t tested on calm days but in chaos. Our best days depend on the habits, processes, and outcomes we’ve drilled when it’s boring. Standards of Excellence anchor behavior, Standard Operating Procedures scale process, and Statements of Outcome align results. Miss one, and progress collapses. Together, they form the invisible architecture of progress.
The Architecture of Progress: Why Our Best Days Depend on Worst-Day Habits
Great leadership isn’t tested on calm days but in chaos. Our best days depend on the habits, processes, and outcomes we’ve drilled when it’s boring. Standards of Excellence anchor behavior, Standard Operating Procedures scale process, and Statements of Outcome align results. Miss one, and progress collapses. Together, they form the invisible architecture of progress.
Journal
Green Dashboards Hide Red Realities: Because nobody brags about being “mostly yellow”
Green dashboards give comfort but often hide reality. They reward vanity metrics and…
The Cult of Busyness: Why We Choose Safety Over Substance
Most of what we call progress is just motion. Leaders hide in busyness because it feels…
The Illusion of Progress: Why we are Addicted to Activity but Starving for Outcomes
Most of what we call progress is just motion. Like Skinner’s pigeons pecking for pellets,…
Unpacking the Sandwich: How AI is Really Teaching Us to Collaborate
Great leadership isn’t tested on calm days but in chaos. Our best days depend on the…
The Architecture of Progress: Why Our Best Days Depend on Worst-Day Habits
Great leadership isn’t tested on calm days but in chaos. Our best days depend on the…