
1
00:00:00,000 –> 00:00:01,840
Hello, my name is Milco Peters,
2
00:00:01,840 –> 00:00:05,040
and I translate how technology actually shapes business reality.
3
00:00:05,040 –> 00:00:07,440
You have probably seen this scenario play out before.
4
00:00:07,440 –> 00:00:08,680
The org chart looks clean,
5
00:00:08,680 –> 00:00:10,760
the governance model is officially approved,
6
00:00:10,760 –> 00:00:12,800
and the architecture deck is incredibly sharp.
7
00:00:12,800 –> 00:00:14,200
Teams is buzzing with activity,
8
00:00:14,200 –> 00:00:15,720
SharePoint is packed with files,
9
00:00:15,720 –> 00:00:18,720
and co-pilot sits right at the top of the digital roadmap.
10
00:00:18,720 –> 00:00:20,440
But despite all those green lights,
11
00:00:20,440 –> 00:00:23,560
the day-to-day work still feels slow, repetitive,
12
00:00:23,560 –> 00:00:25,720
and strangely unclear to the people doing it,
13
00:00:25,720 –> 00:00:27,480
because if you look closely,
14
00:00:27,480 –> 00:00:29,360
leaders are often managing an organization
15
00:00:29,360 –> 00:00:30,920
that exists only on paper,
16
00:00:30,920 –> 00:00:32,640
rather than the one that actually operates.
17
00:00:32,640 –> 00:00:34,560
I want to show you exactly where that gap shows up
18
00:00:34,560 –> 00:00:35,920
inside Microsoft 365,
19
00:00:35,920 –> 00:00:38,080
and why it changes how we should think about structure,
20
00:00:38,080 –> 00:00:40,320
performance, and transformation.
21
00:00:40,320 –> 00:00:42,560
The organization leaders think they run.
22
00:00:42,560 –> 00:00:44,880
Most leaders believe they are running a formal organization,
23
00:00:44,880 –> 00:00:46,960
and to be fair, that perspective makes perfect sense
24
00:00:46,960 –> 00:00:47,800
from the top down.
25
00:00:47,800 –> 00:00:50,680
They see a clear org chart with defined reporting lines,
26
00:00:50,680 –> 00:00:52,560
and they rely on governance forums,
27
00:00:52,560 –> 00:00:55,320
steering groups, and approval models to keep things moving.
28
00:00:55,320 –> 00:00:57,800
They look at process maps, architecture diagrams,
29
00:00:57,800 –> 00:01:00,240
and role descriptions as the definitive truth
30
00:01:00,240 –> 00:01:01,640
of how the business functions.
31
00:01:01,640 –> 00:01:02,960
All of that structure matters,
32
00:01:02,960 –> 00:01:04,920
and I am certainly not saying it doesn’t.
33
00:01:04,920 –> 00:01:06,840
Formal design serves a vital purpose
34
00:01:06,840 –> 00:01:09,760
because it creates accountability and defines ownership
35
00:01:09,760 –> 00:01:12,520
while reducing ambiguity at the level of intent.
36
00:01:12,520 –> 00:01:13,800
Without those guardrails,
37
00:01:13,800 –> 00:01:15,320
you don’t really have an organization,
38
00:01:15,320 –> 00:01:16,640
you just have a collection of noise.
39
00:01:16,640 –> 00:01:18,360
But here is the thing we often overlook.
40
00:01:18,360 –> 00:01:21,200
Formal design is not the same as operating reality,
41
00:01:21,200 –> 00:01:23,560
and while it tells you how the organization is supposed to work,
42
00:01:23,560 –> 00:01:26,760
it rarely tells you how work actually moves through the system.
43
00:01:26,760 –> 00:01:27,640
And why is that?
44
00:01:27,640 –> 00:01:29,800
The reason is that leaders naturally optimize
45
00:01:29,800 –> 00:01:32,600
what is visible, measurable, and officially approved.
46
00:01:32,600 –> 00:01:34,640
They focus on what shows up in slide decks,
47
00:01:34,640 –> 00:01:36,480
what can be reviewed in governance meetings,
48
00:01:36,480 –> 00:01:38,880
and what can be explained in quarterly business language.
49
00:01:38,880 –> 00:01:41,680
They prioritize what can be assigned to a named function,
50
00:01:41,680 –> 00:01:43,600
so the organization becomes legible
51
00:01:43,600 –> 00:01:45,840
through artifacts like boxes, lines, committees,
52
00:01:45,840 –> 00:01:47,160
and maturity models.
53
00:01:47,160 –> 00:01:49,960
That process creates a very persuasive management fiction.
54
00:01:49,960 –> 00:01:52,840
It isn’t exactly a lie, but it functions more like an abstraction
55
00:01:52,840 –> 00:01:54,960
that people eventually mistake for the thing itself.
56
00:01:54,960 –> 00:01:57,200
Abstractions are useful tools for navigation
57
00:01:57,200 –> 00:01:59,720
until you start managing only the abstraction
58
00:01:59,720 –> 00:02:01,160
and lose sight of the ground.
59
00:02:01,160 –> 00:02:02,920
I have seen this happen in organizations
60
00:02:02,920 –> 00:02:05,240
that looked extremely coherent from the outside.
61
00:02:05,240 –> 00:02:07,360
They had a clear digital workplace strategy,
62
00:02:07,360 –> 00:02:09,520
Strong Microsoft 365 governance,
63
00:02:09,520 –> 00:02:11,400
and well-defined collaboration standards
64
00:02:11,400 –> 00:02:14,760
for everything from naming conventions to SharePoint patterns.
65
00:02:14,760 –> 00:02:16,960
They had security controls and executive alignment
66
00:02:16,960 –> 00:02:18,560
that would make any auditor happy,
67
00:02:18,560 –> 00:02:20,400
representing everything you would want to see
68
00:02:20,400 –> 00:02:21,680
if you were assessing maturity.
69
00:02:21,680 –> 00:02:23,160
But underneath that polished surface,
70
00:02:23,160 –> 00:02:25,520
the daily experience of work was something else entirely.
71
00:02:25,520 –> 00:02:27,680
People were constantly waiting for feedback,
72
00:02:27,680 –> 00:02:29,520
checking with others for permission,
73
00:02:29,520 –> 00:02:32,080
and searching across disconnected spaces for information
74
00:02:32,080 –> 00:02:33,400
they couldn’t find.
75
00:02:33,400 –> 00:02:36,040
They were recreating documents they knew already existed
76
00:02:36,040 –> 00:02:37,240
somewhere in the system,
77
00:02:37,240 –> 00:02:39,120
and they were escalating issues
78
00:02:39,120 –> 00:02:40,640
through personal relationships instead
79
00:02:40,640 –> 00:02:42,000
of following the official process.
80
00:02:42,000 –> 00:02:44,240
They were trying to move decisions across a structure
81
00:02:44,240 –> 00:02:47,200
that looked organized, but simply didn’t behave that way.
82
00:02:47,200 –> 00:02:48,640
From a system perspective,
83
00:02:48,640 –> 00:02:50,720
that gap matters more than most leaders realize
84
00:02:50,720 –> 00:02:52,640
because one strategy is translated
85
00:02:52,640 –> 00:02:54,360
into operating assumptions.
86
00:02:54,360 –> 00:02:56,640
Every decision starts depending on a picture
87
00:02:56,640 –> 00:02:59,280
of the organization that may no longer be true.
88
00:02:59,280 –> 00:03:01,520
You might think ownership sits in one specific place,
89
00:03:01,520 –> 00:03:03,920
but the actual context needed to make a decision
90
00:03:03,920 –> 00:03:04,920
sits somewhere else.
91
00:03:04,920 –> 00:03:07,360
You might think approval follows a formal path,
92
00:03:07,360 –> 00:03:09,600
but the real unblocker is often a person
93
00:03:09,600 –> 00:03:11,680
completely outside the chain of command.
94
00:03:11,680 –> 00:03:12,920
You think knowledge is being shared
95
00:03:12,920 –> 00:03:14,480
because it is stored in a folder,
96
00:03:14,480 –> 00:03:16,680
but storage is not the same thing as shared understanding.
97
00:03:16,680 –> 00:03:18,400
The same logic applies to engagement
98
00:03:18,400 –> 00:03:20,280
where you might think collaboration is healthy
99
00:03:20,280 –> 00:03:22,040
because activity levels are high,
100
00:03:22,040 –> 00:03:24,720
but high activity is often just structural compensation
101
00:03:24,720 –> 00:03:25,920
for a broken process.
102
00:03:25,920 –> 00:03:27,360
That is the real risk here.
103
00:03:27,360 –> 00:03:29,240
Leaders are often making design decisions
104
00:03:29,240 –> 00:03:30,680
based on structural assumptions
105
00:03:30,680 –> 00:03:32,200
instead of behavioral evidence.
106
00:03:32,200 –> 00:03:34,920
And the more coherent the formal model looks,
107
00:03:34,920 –> 00:03:37,640
the easier it becomes to miss the fragmentation hidden
108
00:03:37,640 –> 00:03:38,240
underneath.
109
00:03:38,240 –> 00:03:39,880
That is the trap we fall into.
110
00:03:39,880 –> 00:03:42,440
A clean diagram creates a sense of confidence,
111
00:03:42,440 –> 00:03:45,160
and that confidence quickly reduces curiosity.
112
00:03:45,160 –> 00:03:46,800
Reduced curiosity is dangerous
113
00:03:46,800 –> 00:03:49,280
when the real organization has already drifted away
114
00:03:49,280 –> 00:03:50,440
from the formal one.
115
00:03:50,440 –> 00:03:52,360
And organizations always drift quietly.
116
00:03:52,360 –> 00:03:54,600
This drift doesn’t happen through a dramatic collapse,
117
00:03:54,600 –> 00:03:57,200
but through a thousand small adjustments made by employees
118
00:03:57,200 –> 00:03:58,920
just trying to get their jobs done.
119
00:03:58,920 –> 00:04:00,280
It looks like a workaround here,
120
00:04:00,280 –> 00:04:02,320
a private channel there, or a copied file
121
00:04:02,320 –> 00:04:04,000
that bypasses the official library.
122
00:04:04,000 –> 00:04:05,800
It shows up as an inherited permission
123
00:04:05,800 –> 00:04:09,040
or an informal decision path that works faster than the approved one.
124
00:04:09,040 –> 00:04:10,520
None of those things look strategic
125
00:04:10,520 –> 00:04:11,920
when you see them in isolation,
126
00:04:11,920 –> 00:04:14,160
but together they form the actual operating model
127
00:04:14,160 –> 00:04:15,000
of the company.
128
00:04:15,000 –> 00:04:17,000
If leadership never looks at that level,
129
00:04:17,000 –> 00:04:18,880
the organization they believe they manage
130
00:04:18,880 –> 00:04:21,240
becomes less and less connected to the one
131
00:04:21,240 –> 00:04:23,080
actually producing business outcomes.
132
00:04:23,080 –> 00:04:25,240
This is exactly where a lot of transformation works
133
00:04:25,240 –> 00:04:26,240
starts to fail.
134
00:04:26,240 –> 00:04:27,880
It isn’t because the tools are wrong
135
00:04:27,880 –> 00:04:31,000
or because the people inside the system are resisting change,
136
00:04:31,000 –> 00:04:33,120
but because the intervention is aimed
137
00:04:33,120 –> 00:04:34,560
at the documented organization
138
00:04:34,560 –> 00:04:37,120
while the actual friction lives in the behavioral ones.
139
00:04:37,120 –> 00:04:39,280
So when leaders say they already have governance
140
00:04:39,280 –> 00:04:41,200
or they have already clarified ownership,
141
00:04:41,200 –> 00:04:44,360
what they usually mean is that the formal design exists,
142
00:04:44,360 –> 00:04:46,640
what they have not yet confirmed is whether the operating
143
00:04:46,640 –> 00:04:48,160
behavior actually follows it.
144
00:04:48,160 –> 00:04:50,720
That distinction changes everything about how we lead.
145
00:04:50,720 –> 00:04:52,720
Hierarchy explains who is accountable,
146
00:04:52,720 –> 00:04:55,240
but behavior explains how things are executed.
147
00:04:55,240 –> 00:04:58,160
If you want to understand why work feels slow inside an organization
148
00:04:58,160 –> 00:04:59,160
that looks mature,
149
00:04:59,160 –> 00:05:02,120
you have to stop looking only at the structure that was designed
150
00:05:02,120 –> 00:05:04,360
and start looking at the one that emerged,
151
00:05:04,360 –> 00:05:05,440
because at the end of the day,
152
00:05:05,440 –> 00:05:08,400
that is the organization that actually runs the business.
153
00:05:08,400 –> 00:05:11,000
The organization that actually exists.
154
00:05:11,000 –> 00:05:13,200
So what is the organization that actually exists?
155
00:05:13,200 –> 00:05:16,000
It is definitely not the one you’ll find in the corporate slide deck
156
00:05:16,000 –> 00:05:19,120
because the real organization is expressed through the behavior
157
00:05:19,120 –> 00:05:21,040
inside the tools people use every day.
158
00:05:21,040 –> 00:05:23,080
That is the real shift we need to acknowledge.
159
00:05:23,080 –> 00:05:25,760
If we want to understand organizational reality,
160
00:05:25,760 –> 00:05:28,960
we have to stop asking how the company is structured in principle
161
00:05:28,960 –> 00:05:32,480
and start asking how work actually gets done in practice.
162
00:05:32,480 –> 00:05:34,600
Who asks whom before taking action?
163
00:05:34,600 –> 00:05:37,760
And where does the document start before it inevitably gets copied?
164
00:05:37,760 –> 00:05:39,880
You have to look at which approval step looks formal,
165
00:05:39,880 –> 00:05:41,560
but is really just a delay
166
00:05:41,560 –> 00:05:45,000
while everyone waits for one specific trusted person to respond.
167
00:05:45,000 –> 00:05:46,600
We need to see where work stalls
168
00:05:46,600 –> 00:05:48,640
and where the actual context lives.
169
00:05:48,640 –> 00:05:51,800
When the official path is too slow, where do people go instead?
170
00:05:51,800 –> 00:05:53,120
That is the real organization
171
00:05:53,120 –> 00:05:55,920
and it is usually far more visible than leaders think.
172
00:05:55,920 –> 00:05:58,840
You can see it in decision paths and access patterns,
173
00:05:58,840 –> 00:06:01,120
but you also see it in duplicated content
174
00:06:01,120 –> 00:06:02,800
and informal escalation loops.
175
00:06:02,800 –> 00:06:04,800
It shows up in side chats, local trackers
176
00:06:04,800 –> 00:06:07,520
and files renamed final V7 actual
177
00:06:07,520 –> 00:06:09,080
because the formal system failed.
178
00:06:09,080 –> 00:06:10,720
The same few people get pulled into everything
179
00:06:10,720 –> 00:06:12,960
because they hold context that the formal structure
180
00:06:12,960 –> 00:06:14,080
never bothered to distribute.
181
00:06:14,080 –> 00:06:16,400
Now, this is important because most organizations
182
00:06:16,400 –> 00:06:19,240
still try to explain themselves through a rigid hierarchy.
183
00:06:19,240 –> 00:06:20,840
Hierarchy matters because it tells you
184
00:06:20,840 –> 00:06:23,240
who is accountable and where authority is meant to sit
185
00:06:23,240 –> 00:06:25,360
but hierarchy does not explain execution.
186
00:06:25,360 –> 00:06:26,680
Execution is behavioral
187
00:06:26,680 –> 00:06:28,840
and it emerges from how information moves,
188
00:06:28,840 –> 00:06:30,920
how trust is formed and how people compensate
189
00:06:30,920 –> 00:06:33,720
when the formal path doesn’t match the speed of the business.
190
00:06:33,720 –> 00:06:35,440
That’s why so many frustrations
191
00:06:35,440 –> 00:06:37,680
that sound personal are not personal at all.
192
00:06:37,680 –> 00:06:39,520
Confusion, delay and dependency
193
00:06:39,520 –> 00:06:41,120
are often just system outcomes.
194
00:06:41,120 –> 00:06:43,000
When people say they don’t know who owns a project
195
00:06:43,000 –> 00:06:45,200
or that they need to check with three people before moving,
196
00:06:45,200 –> 00:06:46,680
that isn’t just poor discipline,
197
00:06:46,680 –> 00:06:49,320
it is the organization revealing its actual shape
198
00:06:49,320 –> 00:06:51,000
and the real shape is rarely clean.
199
00:06:51,000 –> 00:06:52,480
It emerges through repetition,
200
00:06:52,480 –> 00:06:54,880
which means a repeated question tells you exactly
201
00:06:54,880 –> 00:06:56,160
where clarity is missing.
202
00:06:56,160 –> 00:06:58,920
A repeated handoff shows you where ownership is weak
203
00:06:58,920 –> 00:07:01,160
and a repeated file copy proves that trust
204
00:07:01,160 –> 00:07:02,640
in the original source is low.
205
00:07:02,640 –> 00:07:04,080
When you see a repeated escalation,
206
00:07:04,080 –> 00:07:05,320
it tells you the formal process
207
00:07:05,320 –> 00:07:07,520
cannot carry the operational pressure of the business.
208
00:07:07,520 –> 00:07:10,880
So the actual organization is not made of departments alone
209
00:07:10,880 –> 00:07:14,280
but is instead made of the movement of messages, files, approvals
210
00:07:14,280 –> 00:07:15,200
and access.
211
00:07:15,200 –> 00:07:18,120
Once you start looking there, a very different picture appears.
212
00:07:18,120 –> 00:07:21,400
You find that some people outside the official chain shape key outcomes
213
00:07:21,400 –> 00:07:23,400
because they sit at a knowledge bottleneck.
214
00:07:23,400 –> 00:07:24,920
Some teams collaborate constantly,
215
00:07:24,920 –> 00:07:26,040
not because they are aligned,
216
00:07:26,040 –> 00:07:29,520
but because they are forced to reconcile fragmented information
217
00:07:29,520 –> 00:07:30,560
over and over again.
218
00:07:30,560 –> 00:07:34,280
You might find that a formally senior role matters less in execution
219
00:07:34,280 –> 00:07:36,680
than a person with the right permissions or the right history.
220
00:07:36,680 –> 00:07:38,800
This is why I keep coming back to one idea.
221
00:07:38,800 –> 00:07:40,960
The organization is not what it says about itself,
222
00:07:40,960 –> 00:07:42,400
it is what its behavior produces.
223
00:07:42,400 –> 00:07:44,960
Behavior is not random as it follows incentives,
224
00:07:44,960 –> 00:07:47,080
constraints, interfaces and design.
225
00:07:47,080 –> 00:07:50,920
When we see rework, uncertainty or a dependence on heroics,
226
00:07:50,920 –> 00:07:54,120
we should stop treating those as isolated performance issues.
227
00:07:54,120 –> 00:07:55,560
They are structural signals.
228
00:07:55,560 –> 00:07:57,480
The system is doing exactly what it was set up to do.
229
00:07:57,480 –> 00:07:59,880
It’s just not aligned with the story leadership is telling.
230
00:07:59,880 –> 00:08:03,120
That gap matters even more now because modern work leaves traces.
231
00:08:03,120 –> 00:08:06,120
In Microsoft 365, people are constantly generating evidence
232
00:08:06,120 –> 00:08:07,880
of how the business really operates.
233
00:08:07,880 –> 00:08:10,640
This is in theory, its telemetry found in collaboration,
234
00:08:10,640 –> 00:08:12,000
behavior and document movement.
235
00:08:12,000 –> 00:08:14,760
We no longer have to guess where the real organization is
236
00:08:14,760 –> 00:08:16,520
because we can observe it and map it.
237
00:08:16,520 –> 00:08:18,560
We can finally test whether the formal design
238
00:08:18,560 –> 00:08:20,960
and the operating reality still match.
239
00:08:20,960 –> 00:08:22,760
When they don’t, that mismatch explains
240
00:08:22,760 –> 00:08:25,400
what leaders call culture problems or change resistance.
241
00:08:25,400 –> 00:08:27,200
Very often, it’s not resistance first,
242
00:08:27,200 –> 00:08:28,600
but structural compensation.
243
00:08:28,600 –> 00:08:30,600
People are simply adapting to a design
244
00:08:30,600 –> 00:08:33,040
that doesn’t support the work as it really happens,
245
00:08:33,040 –> 00:08:34,640
which brings me to the first signal,
246
00:08:34,640 –> 00:08:37,280
one that almost every leadership team already owns,
247
00:08:37,280 –> 00:08:39,120
but very few read correctly.
248
00:08:39,120 –> 00:08:41,440
What shows up in teams is usually not a clean story
249
00:08:41,440 –> 00:08:43,920
of collaboration but a pressure map.
250
00:08:43,920 –> 00:08:46,280
Signal one, teams shows coordination pressure
251
00:08:46,280 –> 00:08:47,680
and not collaboration health.
252
00:08:47,680 –> 00:08:50,720
Let’s start with teams because this is where a lot of leaders
253
00:08:50,720 –> 00:08:51,800
make the wrong read.
254
00:08:51,800 –> 00:08:54,680
They open the admin view or hear the adoption update
255
00:08:54,680 –> 00:08:56,640
and the numbers sound reassuring.
256
00:08:56,640 –> 00:08:58,600
High usage and plenty of channel activity
257
00:08:58,600 –> 00:09:01,400
make it seem like the organization is healthy from the surface.
258
00:09:01,400 –> 00:09:02,840
But here’s where it gets interesting.
259
00:09:02,840 –> 00:09:04,360
Teams is not just a collaboration tool.
260
00:09:04,360 –> 00:09:05,680
It is a coordination layer.
261
00:09:05,680 –> 00:09:07,080
Coordination layers become noisy
262
00:09:07,080 –> 00:09:09,120
when the underlying organization is fragmented.
263
00:09:09,120 –> 00:09:11,320
If you want to understand what teams is really telling you,
264
00:09:11,320 –> 00:09:13,320
don’t just ask whether people are active.
265
00:09:13,320 –> 00:09:15,600
Ask what kind of activity the environment is forcing.
266
00:09:15,600 –> 00:09:18,680
High activity can mean the organization is working in sync
267
00:09:18,680 –> 00:09:20,680
or it can mean the organization is spending energy
268
00:09:20,680 –> 00:09:22,360
compensating for a weak structure.
269
00:09:22,360 –> 00:09:23,960
Those are very different realities
270
00:09:23,960 –> 00:09:26,680
and most dashboards don’t tell you the difference by default.
271
00:09:26,680 –> 00:09:28,680
To make this practical, when I look at teams,
272
00:09:28,680 –> 00:09:31,280
I’m not mainly interested in whether usage is up,
273
00:09:31,280 –> 00:09:32,800
I’m looking for structural clues
274
00:09:32,800 –> 00:09:34,960
like how many teams exist relative
275
00:09:34,960 –> 00:09:37,320
to the actual work model and where private channels start
276
00:09:37,320 –> 00:09:38,160
multiplying.
277
00:09:38,160 –> 00:09:40,440
I want to see how often people fall back to chat instead
278
00:09:40,440 –> 00:09:42,920
of shared spaces and whether message density is creating
279
00:09:42,920 –> 00:09:44,480
clarity or just traffic.
280
00:09:44,480 –> 00:09:46,320
A well-designed collaboration environment
281
00:09:46,320 –> 00:09:47,960
should reduce coordination effort
282
00:09:47,960 –> 00:09:50,120
by lowering the amount of checking, chasing,
283
00:09:50,120 –> 00:09:52,200
and clarifying people need to do.
284
00:09:52,200 –> 00:09:55,120
If teams’ activity keeps rising while work still feels unclear,
285
00:09:55,120 –> 00:09:56,920
the platform is not showing healthy flow.
286
00:09:56,920 –> 00:09:57,840
It’s showing pressure.
287
00:09:57,840 –> 00:09:59,840
Take team and channels, brawl as an example.
288
00:09:59,840 –> 00:10:02,360
On paper, lots of teams can look like engagement.
289
00:10:02,360 –> 00:10:03,680
But in practice, it often means
290
00:10:03,680 –> 00:10:05,560
the organization keeps creating new containers
291
00:10:05,560 –> 00:10:07,600
instead of resolving ownership problems.
292
00:10:07,600 –> 00:10:10,960
A new team gets created because the existing one is too broad
293
00:10:10,960 –> 00:10:12,640
and then a private channel appears
294
00:10:12,640 –> 00:10:14,440
because people don’t trust the wider space.
295
00:10:14,440 –> 00:10:17,560
Eventually, a side chat becomes the real decision space
296
00:10:17,560 –> 00:10:20,120
because the formal channel is too noisy or too slow.
297
00:10:20,120 –> 00:10:21,920
The visible environment keeps expanding
298
00:10:21,920 –> 00:10:24,120
while shared context keeps shrinking.
299
00:10:24,120 –> 00:10:27,240
That’s the pattern, more spaces, but less coherence.
300
00:10:27,240 –> 00:10:29,320
Private channels are especially revealing here.
301
00:10:29,320 –> 00:10:30,600
I’m not saying they are bad,
302
00:10:30,600 –> 00:10:32,280
sometimes they are the right design choice.
303
00:10:32,280 –> 00:10:34,400
But when they multiply across functions,
304
00:10:34,400 –> 00:10:36,440
they tell you trust is uneven.
305
00:10:36,440 –> 00:10:39,600
Ownership is unclear and cross-team work feels operationally
306
00:10:39,600 –> 00:10:40,920
unsafe in the open,
307
00:10:40,920 –> 00:10:43,320
so people create protected coordination pockets.
308
00:10:43,320 –> 00:10:45,560
From a system perspective, that’s not just a preference.
309
00:10:45,560 –> 00:10:46,560
It’s an adaptation.
310
00:10:46,560 –> 00:10:48,360
The environment is producing behavior
311
00:10:48,360 –> 00:10:49,800
that roots around friction.
312
00:10:49,800 –> 00:10:51,400
The same thing shows up in chat.
313
00:10:51,400 –> 00:10:53,680
If decisions repeatedly happen in one-to-one chats
314
00:10:53,680 –> 00:10:54,960
instead of shared channels,
315
00:10:54,960 –> 00:10:57,440
it usually means the shared environment is not trusted
316
00:10:57,440 –> 00:10:58,480
as an execution layer.
317
00:10:58,480 –> 00:11:01,040
Maybe it’s too noisy or the right people are missing,
318
00:11:01,040 –> 00:11:03,160
but whatever the reason behavior is telling you
319
00:11:03,160 –> 00:11:05,880
the formal space is not carrying the real work.
320
00:11:05,880 –> 00:11:07,160
Then there’s message density,
321
00:11:07,160 –> 00:11:09,280
which is one of the easiest signals to misread.
322
00:11:09,280 –> 00:11:11,920
A high volume of messages can look like momentum,
323
00:11:11,920 –> 00:11:13,760
but often it means people are burning effort
324
00:11:13,760 –> 00:11:16,080
on alignment that should have been built into the design.
325
00:11:16,080 –> 00:11:18,080
You see a lot of people checking who owns a task
326
00:11:18,080 –> 00:11:19,760
or which version of a file is current.
327
00:11:19,760 –> 00:11:21,160
That is not collaboration excellence.
328
00:11:21,160 –> 00:11:23,240
It is structural compensation happening at scale.
329
00:11:23,240 –> 00:11:26,080
The organization is working hard to recreate clarity
330
00:11:26,080 –> 00:11:28,200
in real time because the operating model
331
00:11:28,200 –> 00:11:29,800
didn’t provide enough of it upfront.
332
00:11:29,800 –> 00:11:31,680
When leaders celebrate high teams engagement
333
00:11:31,680 –> 00:11:33,480
without asking what that engagement is doing,
334
00:11:33,480 –> 00:11:35,000
they miss the actual signal.
335
00:11:35,000 –> 00:11:37,080
More activity can mean more uncertainty
336
00:11:37,080 –> 00:11:39,440
and more conversation can mean weaker interfaces.
337
00:11:39,440 –> 00:11:41,440
Teams doesn’t just show whether people are talking,
338
00:11:41,440 –> 00:11:43,840
it shows how much coordination load the organization
339
00:11:43,840 –> 00:11:45,760
is carrying to keep work moving.
340
00:11:45,760 –> 00:11:47,640
Once you start seeing teams that way,
341
00:11:47,640 –> 00:11:50,040
the platform stops looking like proof of maturity
342
00:11:50,040 –> 00:11:53,120
and starts looking like an operational stress indicator.
343
00:11:53,120 –> 00:11:54,400
This brings me to the next signal
344
00:11:54,400 –> 00:11:57,240
because conversation pressure is only part of the picture.
345
00:11:57,240 –> 00:11:58,920
If you want to see how fragmentation
346
00:11:58,920 –> 00:12:00,560
hardens into organizational memory,
347
00:12:00,560 –> 00:12:03,000
you have to look at where knowledge starts to split.
348
00:12:03,000 –> 00:12:05,640
And that usually shows up in SharePoint and OneDrive.
349
00:12:05,640 –> 00:12:08,120
DUM, why high activity usually means
350
00:12:08,120 –> 00:12:10,080
the system is working harder than it should?
351
00:12:10,080 –> 00:12:12,480
Now map that reality to how we work today.
352
00:12:12,480 –> 00:12:13,960
A busy collaboration environment
353
00:12:13,960 –> 00:12:15,560
creates a convincing appearance of flow
354
00:12:15,560 –> 00:12:17,200
because messages move meetings happen
355
00:12:17,200 –> 00:12:19,040
and notifications fire all day long.
356
00:12:19,040 –> 00:12:22,320
People respond quickly and there is visible motion everywhere,
357
00:12:22,320 –> 00:12:23,960
which leads many leaders to mistake
358
00:12:23,960 –> 00:12:26,720
this constant activity for genuine progress.
359
00:12:26,720 –> 00:12:27,680
But here is the thing.
360
00:12:27,680 –> 00:12:29,600
Activity is not the same as throughput
361
00:12:29,600 –> 00:12:32,000
and it is definitely not the same as clarity.
362
00:12:32,000 –> 00:12:35,160
A healthy operating model should remove unnecessary coordination
363
00:12:35,160 –> 00:12:37,920
by allowing people to act with enough context, trust,
364
00:12:37,920 –> 00:12:39,400
and ownership that work moves
365
00:12:39,400 –> 00:12:41,400
without constant social repair.
366
00:12:41,400 –> 00:12:42,520
When that structure is missing,
367
00:12:42,520 –> 00:12:44,120
the gap gets rebuilt manually
368
00:12:44,120 –> 00:12:45,920
through endless pings and check-ins.
369
00:12:45,920 –> 00:12:47,920
That is what high activity often represents.
370
00:12:47,920 –> 00:12:50,000
It is manual structural compensation.
371
00:12:50,000 –> 00:12:52,240
The system is working harder than it should
372
00:12:52,240 –> 00:12:54,600
because the design forces people to carry a load
373
00:12:54,600 –> 00:12:57,160
that the environment should be carrying for them.
374
00:12:57,160 –> 00:12:58,920
You can hear the structural failure
375
00:12:58,920 –> 00:13:00,600
in the language people use every day.
376
00:13:00,600 –> 00:13:03,200
They say things like, “I just want to double check.”
377
00:13:03,200 –> 00:13:05,520
Or let me ask them first before we move.
378
00:13:05,520 –> 00:13:07,320
They ask if anyone has the latest version
379
00:13:07,320 –> 00:13:09,240
or if legal has already weighed in
380
00:13:09,240 –> 00:13:11,720
and they insist on aligning before anything is sent out.
381
00:13:11,720 –> 00:13:13,560
While that sounds responsible and sometimes it is,
382
00:13:13,560 –> 00:13:14,520
it tells a different story
383
00:13:14,520 –> 00:13:16,400
when it becomes the normal operating rhythm.
384
00:13:16,400 –> 00:13:18,840
It reveals that the system does not provide enough confidence
385
00:13:18,840 –> 00:13:20,000
for people to move
386
00:13:20,000 –> 00:13:21,840
so that confidence has to be recreated
387
00:13:21,840 –> 00:13:23,880
through conversation over and over again.
388
00:13:23,880 –> 00:13:26,240
This is where many organizations accidentally celebrate
389
00:13:26,240 –> 00:13:28,240
the wrong signals by praising responsiveness
390
00:13:28,240 –> 00:13:29,880
and collaboration intensity.
391
00:13:29,880 –> 00:13:31,600
They love how connected everyone seems
392
00:13:31,600 –> 00:13:33,320
but if people need constant touch points
393
00:13:33,320 –> 00:13:34,760
just to avoid making mistakes,
394
00:13:34,760 –> 00:13:36,400
then that connection is a load signal
395
00:13:36,400 –> 00:13:37,640
rather than a strength signal.
396
00:13:37,640 –> 00:13:40,120
The organization has not actually reduced dependency.
397
00:13:40,120 –> 00:13:41,600
It has simply normalized it.
398
00:13:41,600 –> 00:13:42,440
And why is that?
399
00:13:42,440 –> 00:13:44,600
It happens because repeated alignment conversations
400
00:13:44,600 –> 00:13:45,880
usually point to a failure
401
00:13:45,880 –> 00:13:47,640
in how dependencies are designed.
402
00:13:47,640 –> 00:13:48,960
The work is not modular enough,
403
00:13:48,960 –> 00:13:50,200
the interfaces are not clear
404
00:13:50,200 –> 00:13:53,000
and the ownership boundaries are too weak to stand on their own.
405
00:13:53,000 –> 00:13:54,640
When the source of truth is not trusted,
406
00:13:54,640 –> 00:13:57,480
you don’t get clean execution, you get human middleware,
407
00:13:57,480 –> 00:13:59,160
you find people translating between teams
408
00:13:59,160 –> 00:14:01,040
and carrying context across boundaries
409
00:14:01,040 –> 00:14:02,320
to stitch together decisions
410
00:14:02,320 –> 00:14:04,600
that the operating model should have made easy.
411
00:14:04,600 –> 00:14:07,200
That is why checking with others is so misleading.
412
00:14:07,200 –> 00:14:08,520
It gets framed as teamwork
413
00:14:08,520 –> 00:14:10,600
but structurally it is often a workaround
414
00:14:10,600 –> 00:14:12,160
for a weak information flow.
415
00:14:12,160 –> 00:14:13,920
A person isn’t asking for help
416
00:14:13,920 –> 00:14:16,400
because collaboration is inherently valuable
417
00:14:16,400 –> 00:14:18,040
in that specific moment.
418
00:14:18,040 –> 00:14:20,360
They are asking because the system failed to give them
419
00:14:20,360 –> 00:14:22,640
the certainty they needed to proceed alone.
420
00:14:22,640 –> 00:14:23,680
That distinction matters
421
00:14:23,680 –> 00:14:26,920
because if leaders interpret this as positive collaboration,
422
00:14:26,920 –> 00:14:28,840
they will keep scaling the wrong pattern.
423
00:14:28,840 –> 00:14:31,640
They add more things, more channels and more approval loops
424
00:14:31,640 –> 00:14:34,480
which only increases the latency of the entire operation.
425
00:14:34,480 –> 00:14:36,240
This doesn’t happen in one dramatic collapse
426
00:14:36,240 –> 00:14:38,560
but rather in thousands of micro delays
427
00:14:38,560 –> 00:14:40,320
where a message waits 30 minutes
428
00:14:40,320 –> 00:14:42,000
or a meeting gets pushed to tomorrow.
429
00:14:42,000 –> 00:14:44,400
A file gets reviewed one more time for safety
430
00:14:44,400 –> 00:14:46,560
and a side call happens before the formal update
431
00:14:46,560 –> 00:14:48,440
but then another clarification is needed
432
00:14:48,440 –> 00:14:51,640
because the side call never made it back into the shared space.
433
00:14:51,640 –> 00:14:53,800
This is how slow organizations hide.
434
00:14:53,800 –> 00:14:55,880
They don’t look slow, they look incredibly busy.
435
00:14:55,880 –> 00:14:57,400
Decision latency is hard to see
436
00:14:57,400 –> 00:14:59,920
because it accumulates in the gaps between visible actions
437
00:14:59,920 –> 00:15:02,600
like the space between a message and an answer
438
00:15:02,600 –> 00:15:05,720
or the time between a decision and the final version.
439
00:15:05,720 –> 00:15:08,640
The cost is spread across hundreds of tiny pauses
440
00:15:08,640 –> 00:15:10,640
so nobody names it as a structural issue
441
00:15:10,640 –> 00:15:13,320
even though everyone experiences the work as heavy.
442
00:15:13,320 –> 00:15:15,120
Over time people adapt to that heaviness
443
00:15:15,120 –> 00:15:16,640
by building habits around it.
444
00:15:16,640 –> 00:15:17,960
They copy more people on emails,
445
00:15:17,960 –> 00:15:19,840
create pre-meetings for the actual meetings
446
00:15:19,840 –> 00:15:23,440
and store local versions of files to avoid waiting on a slow system.
447
00:15:23,440 –> 00:15:27,280
They rely on trusted individuals instead of trusted environments
448
00:15:27,280 –> 00:15:30,080
and while that adaptation keeps the business functioning
449
00:15:30,080 –> 00:15:32,240
it also hides the underlying design failure.
450
00:15:32,240 –> 00:15:34,400
From a system perspective, a lot of modern knowledge work
451
00:15:34,400 –> 00:15:35,720
isn’t execution at all.
452
00:15:35,720 –> 00:15:38,960
It is coordination overhead generated by a poor structural fit.
453
00:15:38,960 –> 00:15:41,640
The platform is active because the organization is laboring
454
00:15:41,640 –> 00:15:44,200
just to stay coherent, not because coherence already exists.
455
00:15:44,200 –> 00:15:45,520
Once you understand that,
456
00:15:45,520 –> 00:15:47,520
high activity stops looking reassuring
457
00:15:47,520 –> 00:15:49,080
and starts looking expensive.
458
00:15:49,080 –> 00:15:51,800
It is expensive in time, attention and decision speed
459
00:15:51,800 –> 00:15:53,240
and it drains leadership confidence
460
00:15:53,240 –> 00:15:55,040
because everyone feels the drag
461
00:15:55,040 –> 00:15:57,760
while the formal structure insists everything is aligned.
462
00:15:57,760 –> 00:15:59,000
But here’s the real consequence.
463
00:15:59,000 –> 00:16:01,240
When coordination loads stays high for too long
464
00:16:01,240 –> 00:16:03,120
people stop trusting shared knowledge.
465
00:16:03,120 –> 00:16:05,440
They stop assuming the answer is already in the environment
466
00:16:05,440 –> 00:16:07,160
and start recreating it themselves.
467
00:16:07,160 –> 00:16:09,280
That is exactly where collaboration pressure turns
468
00:16:09,280 –> 00:16:10,760
into knowledge fragmentation.
469
00:16:10,760 –> 00:16:15,160
Signal 2, SharePoint and OneDrive reveal how knowledge actually moves.
470
00:16:15,160 –> 00:16:16,320
Now we get to the second signal
471
00:16:16,320 –> 00:16:18,280
because once coordination pressure gets high enough
472
00:16:18,280 –> 00:16:20,720
people stop relying on shared conversation alone
473
00:16:20,720 –> 00:16:23,000
and start protecting themselves with content.
474
00:16:23,000 –> 00:16:25,200
This usually shows up in SharePoint and OneDrive
475
00:16:25,200 –> 00:16:28,360
which is where many organizations think they are safe.
476
00:16:28,360 –> 00:16:31,760
The files are in Microsoft 365, the libraries exist
477
00:16:31,760 –> 00:16:34,480
and the naming standards might even look good on paper.
478
00:16:34,480 –> 00:16:37,040
From a governance view, knowledge appears to be under control
479
00:16:37,040 –> 00:16:39,480
but storage is not the same as shared understanding.
480
00:16:39,480 –> 00:16:41,640
If you want to see how knowledge actually moves
481
00:16:41,640 –> 00:16:43,520
you have to stop asking where files are stored
482
00:16:43,520 –> 00:16:45,440
and start asking how often they are copied
483
00:16:45,440 –> 00:16:47,320
or renamed just to make work possible.
484
00:16:47,320 –> 00:16:48,760
That is the real signal.
485
00:16:48,760 –> 00:16:52,120
Knowledge doesn’t just break down when information is missing.
486
00:16:52,120 –> 00:16:54,800
It breaks down when information exists in too many places
487
00:16:54,800 –> 00:16:57,120
with too many versions and no clear ownership.
488
00:16:57,120 –> 00:16:59,920
You might find a document in a SharePoint library,
489
00:16:59,920 –> 00:17:01,680
another copy in a project site,
490
00:17:01,680 –> 00:17:04,840
a version in someone’s OneDrive and an attachment in a team’s chat.
491
00:17:04,840 –> 00:17:08,200
Then someone builds a deck that reuses parts of all of them
492
00:17:08,200 –> 00:17:10,880
but no one is fully sure which source was actually final.
493
00:17:10,880 –> 00:17:14,000
From a system perspective that isn’t just untidy content management
494
00:17:14,000 –> 00:17:16,760
it is evidence of low trust in the environment’s ability
495
00:17:16,760 –> 00:17:18,240
to preserve context.
496
00:17:18,240 –> 00:17:20,360
People copy knowledge closer to where they need it
497
00:17:20,360 –> 00:17:22,800
because that is a rational local behavior.
498
00:17:22,800 –> 00:17:24,800
If finding the right file takes too long
499
00:17:24,800 –> 00:17:27,200
or a shared space feels unreliable,
500
00:17:27,200 –> 00:17:30,280
the fastest move is to duplicate what you need and keep going.
501
00:17:30,280 –> 00:17:32,120
The problem is that this local efficiency
502
00:17:32,120 –> 00:17:33,760
creates enterprise fragmentation
503
00:17:33,760 –> 00:17:35,440
where every copy becomes a branch
504
00:17:35,440 –> 00:17:37,680
that creates interpretive risk.
505
00:17:37,680 –> 00:17:40,360
Every unclear version leads to one more conversation
506
00:17:40,360 –> 00:17:42,440
about what is current and what can be acted on
507
00:17:42,440 –> 00:17:45,480
which is how knowledge multiplication becomes decision drag.
508
00:17:45,480 –> 00:17:48,240
You can see this in small patterns like weak metadata,
509
00:17:48,240 –> 00:17:50,040
disconnected libraries and folders
510
00:17:50,040 –> 00:17:52,320
that only make sense to one specific team.
511
00:17:52,320 –> 00:17:55,280
You see historical files that stay available but aren’t trustworthy
512
00:17:55,280 –> 00:17:57,440
and ownership fields that are technically assigned
513
00:17:57,440 –> 00:17:59,160
but operationally meaningless.
514
00:17:59,160 –> 00:18:00,760
When you have a site full of documents
515
00:18:00,760 –> 00:18:03,240
but nobody knows which one carries authority,
516
00:18:03,240 –> 00:18:04,920
you don’t have a content problem.
517
00:18:04,920 –> 00:18:06,640
You have an operating model problem.
518
00:18:06,640 –> 00:18:09,520
Authoritative knowledge requires a clear place, a clear owner
519
00:18:09,520 –> 00:18:11,360
and enough trust that people don’t feel the need
520
00:18:11,360 –> 00:18:12,840
to recreate it elsewhere.
521
00:18:12,840 –> 00:18:14,200
When one of those is missing,
522
00:18:14,200 –> 00:18:17,680
knowledge moves through duplication instead of through reference.
523
00:18:17,680 –> 00:18:20,000
That difference is massive because reference scales
524
00:18:20,000 –> 00:18:23,640
while duplication fragments, one drive is especially revealing here.
525
00:18:23,640 –> 00:18:26,720
I am not saying one drive is the problem as it has a valid role
526
00:18:26,720 –> 00:18:29,120
but when work that should live in shared spaces
527
00:18:29,120 –> 00:18:31,640
keeps getting anchored in personal storage,
528
00:18:31,640 –> 00:18:33,840
the organization is telling you something important.
529
00:18:33,840 –> 00:18:36,200
It is saying that shared environments are not fast
530
00:18:36,200 –> 00:18:39,120
or clear enough for the work as it really happens.
531
00:18:39,120 –> 00:18:41,120
People move from organizational memory
532
00:18:41,120 –> 00:18:43,320
to personal control not out of rebellion
533
00:18:43,320 –> 00:18:45,760
but as an adaptation to a fragile environment.
534
00:18:45,760 –> 00:18:48,880
Now map that to AI because this is where the stakes get much higher.
535
00:18:48,880 –> 00:18:51,000
Copilot does not reason over your intention.
536
00:18:51,000 –> 00:18:54,960
It reasons over accessible content, permissions and contact signals.
537
00:18:54,960 –> 00:18:57,200
If your SharePoint and one drive environment
538
00:18:57,200 –> 00:18:59,760
contains contradictory files and duplicated truth,
539
00:18:59,760 –> 00:19:01,480
AI does not remove that ambiguity.
540
00:19:01,480 –> 00:19:02,960
It operationalizes it.
541
00:19:02,960 –> 00:19:05,280
The system is doing exactly what it was designed to do
542
00:19:05,280 –> 00:19:06,920
by surfacing what exists
543
00:19:06,920 –> 00:19:10,760
but it cannot infer the structural clarity your organization failed to maintain.
544
00:19:10,760 –> 00:19:13,520
That is why SharePoint hygiene is not just clean up work,
545
00:19:13,520 –> 00:19:15,360
it is essential infrastructure.
546
00:19:15,360 –> 00:19:18,880
It is a prerequisite for reliable memory and reliable AI outcomes.
547
00:19:18,880 –> 00:19:20,720
Once you see document movement this way,
548
00:19:20,720 –> 00:19:23,240
file duplication stops looking like user’s sloppiness
549
00:19:23,240 –> 00:19:26,320
and starts looking like a map of organizational mistrust.
550
00:19:26,320 –> 00:19:28,960
It shows who trust the source, who copies to move faster
551
00:19:28,960 –> 00:19:31,560
and who recreates because retrieval is too expensive.
552
00:19:31,560 –> 00:19:34,120
That is how knowledge actually moves inside the business
553
00:19:34,120 –> 00:19:36,320
and it doesn’t follow the architecture you documented.
554
00:19:36,320 –> 00:19:38,520
It follows the confidence patterns people build
555
00:19:38,520 –> 00:19:40,160
just to get their work done.
556
00:19:40,160 –> 00:19:42,880
Knowledge is not shared when it has to be recreated.
557
00:19:42,880 –> 00:19:44,560
This is where the phrase “knowledge sharing”
558
00:19:44,560 –> 00:19:47,920
starts to become misleading because in a lot of organizations,
559
00:19:47,920 –> 00:19:50,160
knowledge isn’t actually being shared at all.
560
00:19:50,160 –> 00:19:51,760
It is being recreated on demand.
561
00:19:51,760 –> 00:19:53,720
While those two things might sound similar
562
00:19:53,720 –> 00:19:56,600
from a structural perspective, they are worlds apart.
563
00:19:56,600 –> 00:19:59,600
Shared knowledge means your system preserves context well enough
564
00:19:59,600 –> 00:20:02,360
that the next person can find it, trust it and use it
565
00:20:02,360 –> 00:20:04,400
without rebuilding the answer from scratch.
566
00:20:04,400 –> 00:20:05,920
Recreated knowledge on the other hand
567
00:20:05,920 –> 00:20:08,760
means the system failed to preserve that confidence,
568
00:20:08,760 –> 00:20:11,680
forcing every team to reconstruct meaning locally.
569
00:20:11,680 –> 00:20:13,360
That is an expensive way to operate,
570
00:20:13,360 –> 00:20:16,240
yet the cost stays hidden because the output still appears.
571
00:20:16,240 –> 00:20:18,280
The deck gets finished, the proposal gets sent
572
00:20:18,280 –> 00:20:19,720
and the decision eventually gets made,
573
00:20:19,720 –> 00:20:23,040
so from the outside it looks like the system worked perfectly.
574
00:20:23,040 –> 00:20:25,160
But if the same answer had to be rebuilt three times
575
00:20:25,160 –> 00:20:27,360
across three different spaces by three different groups
576
00:20:27,360 –> 00:20:28,640
that isn’t the flow of knowledge,
577
00:20:28,640 –> 00:20:30,520
that is organizational reprocessing.
578
00:20:30,520 –> 00:20:31,520
And why does this happen?
579
00:20:31,520 –> 00:20:33,600
Usually it comes down to two simple reasons,
580
00:20:33,600 –> 00:20:36,200
low confidence in retrieval and low confidence in others.
581
00:20:36,200 –> 00:20:39,040
If people don’t trust that the right information can be found quickly,
582
00:20:39,040 –> 00:20:39,840
they copy it.
583
00:20:39,840 –> 00:20:42,080
If they don’t trust that another team’s version is complete,
584
00:20:42,080 –> 00:20:44,160
current or usable, they rebuild it themselves.
585
00:20:44,160 –> 00:20:47,080
That behavior is rational and it isn’t a disciplined problem first.
586
00:20:47,080 –> 00:20:48,640
It’s a system outcome.
587
00:20:48,640 –> 00:20:51,240
I see this play out all the time in cross-functional work.
588
00:20:51,240 –> 00:20:52,640
A team needs to move fast,
589
00:20:52,640 –> 00:20:54,560
so they pull a file into their own workspace
590
00:20:54,560 –> 00:20:56,920
and adjust it for their specific context.
591
00:20:56,920 –> 00:20:58,960
Then someone else asks for the same thing
592
00:20:58,960 –> 00:21:01,400
and receives that local version instead of the original.
593
00:21:01,400 –> 00:21:02,960
Now you have two versions in motion.
594
00:21:02,960 –> 00:21:05,680
Eventually a third team adds comments in PowerPoint
595
00:21:05,680 –> 00:21:08,480
or exports a PDF into a chat because it feels safer,
596
00:21:08,480 –> 00:21:11,400
which means the content hasn’t just been duplicated, it has forked.
597
00:21:11,400 –> 00:21:14,000
Every fork carries a different level of trust.
598
00:21:14,000 –> 00:21:17,560
And that creates a hidden tax on every future decision you make.
599
00:21:17,560 –> 00:21:20,520
Every search becomes a piece of interpretation work
600
00:21:20,520 –> 00:21:22,320
where you aren’t just looking for a file
601
00:21:22,320 –> 00:21:24,160
but trying to decode its lineage.
602
00:21:24,160 –> 00:21:26,640
You have to ask which one came first, which one was approved
603
00:21:26,640 –> 00:21:28,600
and which one reflects the latest assumptions
604
00:21:28,600 –> 00:21:29,840
or still carries authority.
605
00:21:29,840 –> 00:21:32,000
If nobody can answer those questions quickly,
606
00:21:32,000 –> 00:21:34,520
people default to something even more expensive.
607
00:21:34,520 –> 00:21:35,920
They start asking around.
608
00:21:35,920 –> 00:21:38,400
Document fragmentation creates conversation overhead
609
00:21:38,400 –> 00:21:40,520
and that overhead creates decision latency.
610
00:21:40,520 –> 00:21:41,360
That’s the chain.
611
00:21:41,360 –> 00:21:43,960
This is also why historical content becomes so dangerous
612
00:21:43,960 –> 00:21:46,600
in mature Microsoft 365 environments.
613
00:21:46,600 –> 00:21:49,000
The documents are still there, search returns something
614
00:21:49,000 –> 00:21:50,240
and the libraries look populated,
615
00:21:50,240 –> 00:21:52,840
but accessibility is not the same thing as reliability.
616
00:21:52,840 –> 00:21:54,320
An old document that stays visible
617
00:21:54,320 –> 00:21:57,960
but is no longer trustworthy adds ambiguity rather than clarity.
618
00:21:57,960 –> 00:21:59,840
It gives the appearance of memory
619
00:21:59,840 –> 00:22:01,520
without the actual function of memory.
620
00:22:01,520 –> 00:22:03,360
From a system perspective, that’s fragile
621
00:22:03,360 –> 00:22:05,560
because decisions now depend on whether individuals
622
00:22:05,560 –> 00:22:07,560
can personally distinguish useful history
623
00:22:07,560 –> 00:22:08,800
from outdated residue.
624
00:22:08,800 –> 00:22:09,800
That does not scale.
625
00:22:09,800 –> 00:22:11,440
Once Copilot enters the picture,
626
00:22:11,440 –> 00:22:13,840
this weakness gets exposed even faster.
627
00:22:13,840 –> 00:22:16,440
Copilot works with whatever the environment makes available
628
00:22:16,440 –> 00:22:19,400
using accessible files, metadata, permissions
629
00:22:19,400 –> 00:22:20,720
and the surrounding context.
630
00:22:20,720 –> 00:22:23,480
If your environment contains multiple contradictory versions
631
00:22:23,480 –> 00:22:25,040
of the same business truth,
632
00:22:25,040 –> 00:22:27,440
Copilot cannot magically resolve the governance failure
633
00:22:27,440 –> 00:22:28,280
underneath.
634
00:22:28,280 –> 00:22:29,280
It can summarize the mess,
635
00:22:29,280 –> 00:22:31,120
surface the contradiction faster
636
00:22:31,120 –> 00:22:33,560
and package uncertainty in fluent language,
637
00:22:33,560 –> 00:22:35,600
but it cannot invent authority where none exists.
638
00:22:35,600 –> 00:22:37,880
That is a critical point leaders need to understand.
639
00:22:37,880 –> 00:22:41,720
Low quality AI output is often not an AI quality problem first.
640
00:22:41,720 –> 00:22:43,800
It is an organizational memory problem.
641
00:22:43,800 –> 00:22:46,120
The model is grounding itself in an environment
642
00:22:46,120 –> 00:22:48,480
where ownership is blurred, lineage is weak
643
00:22:48,480 –> 00:22:50,400
and duplication has replaced confidence.
644
00:22:50,400 –> 00:22:52,920
So when a leader tells me that Copilot gave them
645
00:22:52,920 –> 00:22:55,600
something inconsistent, I’d ask a different question.
646
00:22:55,600 –> 00:22:58,640
What exactly was the system allowed to reason over?
647
00:22:58,640 –> 00:23:00,320
If the content layer is fragmented,
648
00:23:00,320 –> 00:23:02,280
the intelligence will be fragmented too.
649
00:23:02,280 –> 00:23:03,400
The reason is simple,
650
00:23:03,400 –> 00:23:06,320
AI amplifies the operating reality it inherits.
651
00:23:06,320 –> 00:23:08,600
It does not compensate for structural ambiguity.
652
00:23:08,600 –> 00:23:11,000
It just makes that ambiguity more visible.
653
00:23:11,000 –> 00:23:13,640
That visibility is actually useful if we read it correctly.
654
00:23:13,640 –> 00:23:15,200
Duplication is not random noise,
655
00:23:15,200 –> 00:23:17,800
but a measurable signal that the organization does not trust
656
00:23:17,800 –> 00:23:21,160
its own knowledge infrastructure enough to reuse it cleanly.
657
00:23:21,160 –> 00:23:23,240
People recreate answers when the cost of finding
658
00:23:23,240 –> 00:23:25,520
and trusting the original becomes too high.
659
00:23:25,520 –> 00:23:28,560
Every duplicate file is evidence of a boundary failure,
660
00:23:28,560 –> 00:23:30,920
an ownership failure and a failure of trust.
661
00:23:30,920 –> 00:23:33,280
If knowledge has to be recreated to be useful,
662
00:23:33,280 –> 00:23:34,600
it isn’t really shared.
663
00:23:34,600 –> 00:23:37,000
It’s being manually regenerated inside a system
664
00:23:37,000 –> 00:23:39,840
that stores information but fails to preserve meaning.
665
00:23:39,840 –> 00:23:40,960
Which brings me to the next layer
666
00:23:40,960 –> 00:23:43,280
because once knowledge becomes unstable,
667
00:23:43,280 –> 00:23:44,960
access becomes even more important.
668
00:23:44,960 –> 00:23:46,240
In many organizations,
669
00:23:46,240 –> 00:23:48,240
access tells you more about the real structure
670
00:23:48,240 –> 00:23:50,200
than titles ever will.
671
00:23:50,200 –> 00:23:52,840
Signal three, identity and permission drift,
672
00:23:52,840 –> 00:23:54,200
define the real org.
673
00:23:54,200 –> 00:23:55,800
Now we get to the third signal
674
00:23:55,800 –> 00:23:57,280
and in a lot of organizations,
675
00:23:57,280 –> 00:23:59,600
this is the one that reveals the deepest truth.
676
00:23:59,600 –> 00:24:00,680
Access.
677
00:24:00,680 –> 00:24:02,320
If teams shows coordination pressure
678
00:24:02,320 –> 00:24:04,400
and SharePoint shows how knowledge fractures,
679
00:24:04,400 –> 00:24:06,720
then identity and permissions show who the organization
680
00:24:06,720 –> 00:24:07,560
actually depends on.
681
00:24:07,560 –> 00:24:09,520
This isn’t about who the org chart says matters
682
00:24:09,520 –> 00:24:11,560
but who can actually reach what matters.
683
00:24:11,560 –> 00:24:14,480
Most leaders still think of structure in terms of hierarchy
684
00:24:14,480 –> 00:24:16,800
who reports to whom and who owns which function.
685
00:24:16,800 –> 00:24:18,240
But from an operating perspective,
686
00:24:18,240 –> 00:24:20,400
access often tells a much more honest story
687
00:24:20,400 –> 00:24:23,480
about who can see the file, open the site,
688
00:24:23,480 –> 00:24:25,120
or retrieve the history.
689
00:24:25,120 –> 00:24:27,360
It shows who can approve the flow, unblock the issue,
690
00:24:27,360 –> 00:24:29,040
or who still has the admin rights
691
00:24:29,040 –> 00:24:31,480
that nobody cleaned up two reorganizations ago.
692
00:24:31,480 –> 00:24:34,840
That is the real organization expressing itself through reach.
693
00:24:34,840 –> 00:24:36,920
Work does not move through titles alone.
694
00:24:36,920 –> 00:24:38,840
It moves through available context.
695
00:24:38,840 –> 00:24:42,760
If someone has the context, the permissions and the trust to act,
696
00:24:42,760 –> 00:24:43,920
they will shape outcomes,
697
00:24:43,920 –> 00:24:45,960
whether the formal structure acknowledges it or not.
698
00:24:45,960 –> 00:24:48,040
This is why Entra, ID and Microsoft Graph
699
00:24:48,040 –> 00:24:49,040
matter so much here.
700
00:24:49,040 –> 00:24:51,720
They don’t just describe identity in a technical sense.
701
00:24:51,720 –> 00:24:53,680
They expose operational reach,
702
00:24:53,680 –> 00:24:55,400
group membership, inherited access,
703
00:24:55,400 –> 00:24:58,800
and abandoned owners all become part of the real organizational design.
704
00:24:58,800 –> 00:25:02,240
You see old project groups still granting visibility into current work
705
00:25:02,240 –> 00:25:05,400
and security groups that outlive the structure they were created for.
706
00:25:05,400 –> 00:25:07,560
Guest access that was temporary in theory
707
00:25:07,560 –> 00:25:09,440
often becomes permanent in practice,
708
00:25:09,440 –> 00:25:11,480
even if nobody intended for that to happen.
709
00:25:11,480 –> 00:25:14,000
This is where permission drift becomes so important.
710
00:25:14,000 –> 00:25:16,640
Permission drift is what happens when the access model
711
00:25:16,640 –> 00:25:18,560
keeps evolving through local decisions.
712
00:25:18,560 –> 00:25:21,800
But nobody steps back to ask if it still matches the business reality.
713
00:25:21,800 –> 00:25:24,360
A person changes roles but keeps their historical access,
714
00:25:24,360 –> 00:25:26,800
or a team is dissolved but the group remains active.
715
00:25:26,800 –> 00:25:30,280
A site owner leaves and ownership is never properly reassigned.
716
00:25:30,280 –> 00:25:33,960
Or a workaround becomes permanent because removing it feels too risky.
717
00:25:33,960 –> 00:25:36,240
One exception becomes 10, then 50,
718
00:25:36,240 –> 00:25:39,440
and suddenly the environment is carrying the fossil record of past decisions
719
00:25:39,440 –> 00:25:40,800
and old trust assumptions.
720
00:25:40,800 –> 00:25:42,200
The current org chart says one thing,
721
00:25:42,200 –> 00:25:44,280
but the access layer says something else entirely.
722
00:25:44,280 –> 00:25:46,920
From a system perspective, that divergence is not minor,
723
00:25:46,920 –> 00:25:49,040
it changes who actually holds power.
724
00:25:49,040 –> 00:25:52,360
Power in modern organizations is often less about formal rank
725
00:25:52,360 –> 00:25:56,000
and more about control over access, interpretation and release.
726
00:25:56,000 –> 00:25:59,040
The person who can surface the right file at the right time matters.
727
00:25:59,040 –> 00:26:00,960
The person who can confirm what is current,
728
00:26:00,960 –> 00:26:04,040
grant entry, or unblocker workflow matters.
729
00:26:04,040 –> 00:26:07,160
Very often those people sit outside the visible hierarchy
730
00:26:07,160 –> 00:26:09,600
that leadership thinks is governing execution.
731
00:26:09,600 –> 00:26:12,440
That’s why permission reviews are not just a compliance exercise.
732
00:26:12,440 –> 00:26:14,040
They are a structural audit.
733
00:26:14,040 –> 00:26:16,760
They tell you where the business still depends on individuals,
734
00:26:16,760 –> 00:26:19,280
hidden pathways and unexamined inheritance.
735
00:26:19,280 –> 00:26:22,920
They show you exactly where access has become decoupled from accountability.
736
00:26:22,920 –> 00:26:26,600
Once access and accountability diverge, fragility goes up fast.
737
00:26:26,600 –> 00:26:30,320
The people responsible for outcomes are not always the people who can actually move the work,
738
00:26:30,320 –> 00:26:32,240
which creates delay and escalation.
739
00:26:32,240 –> 00:26:34,400
That creates a very specific kind of confusion
740
00:26:34,400 –> 00:26:37,880
where people say they are supposed to own something but can’t get what they need.
741
00:26:37,880 –> 00:26:40,800
Or the reverse happens where someone isn’t meant to be involved anymore,
742
00:26:40,800 –> 00:26:44,080
but everyone still comes to them because they are the only ones who can see the history.
743
00:26:44,080 –> 00:26:47,560
That is not just awkward role design, it’s a system outcome.
744
00:26:47,560 –> 00:26:50,960
The system is preserving old organizational logic in the access layer
745
00:26:50,960 –> 00:26:53,560
long after leadership believes the organization has changed.
746
00:26:53,560 –> 00:26:56,920
So when we say the real org is defined by access, this is what we mean.
747
00:26:56,920 –> 00:27:01,160
It’s not that hierarchy disappears, but that operational reality is shaped
748
00:27:01,160 –> 00:27:04,040
by who can reach information and act without waiting.
749
00:27:04,040 –> 00:27:07,240
That is often a better map of the business than the org chart itself.
750
00:27:07,240 –> 00:27:11,080
Once you overlay that with team’s behavior and content duplication,
751
00:27:11,080 –> 00:27:12,960
the pattern becomes impossible to ignore.
752
00:27:12,960 –> 00:27:17,760
You’re no longer looking at noise, you’re looking at the hidden structure the business actually runs on.
753
00:27:17,760 –> 00:27:20,640
Access patterns reveal power better than hierarchy.
754
00:27:20,640 –> 00:27:23,840
And this is where it becomes relevant for anyone responsible for systems.
755
00:27:23,840 –> 00:27:26,840
Once you stop looking at permissions as a boring IT hygiene issue
756
00:27:26,840 –> 00:27:31,080
and start reading them as an operating signal, you begin to see power differently.
757
00:27:31,080 –> 00:27:35,520
I’m not talking about theoretical power or the kind people show off in slide decks.
758
00:27:35,520 –> 00:27:38,840
I’m talking about operational power, which is the specific force
759
00:27:38,840 –> 00:27:42,720
that determines whether work moves today or sits stuck until next week.
760
00:27:42,720 –> 00:27:46,160
In a formal hierarchy, we assume power sits with seniority
761
00:27:46,160 –> 00:27:49,600
because titles imply authority and job levels imply control.
762
00:27:49,600 –> 00:27:53,160
We look at escalation paths and see order, but in live enterprise systems,
763
00:27:53,160 –> 00:27:55,120
what matters is something far less visible.
764
00:27:55,120 –> 00:27:59,240
The real influence belongs to the people who can see, approve, retrieve, change
765
00:27:59,240 –> 00:28:00,920
and unblock the flow of information.
766
00:28:00,920 –> 00:28:05,000
That is why access patterns often reveal power better than a hierarchy ever could.
767
00:28:05,000 –> 00:28:07,400
When a decision gets stuck, the person who matters most
768
00:28:07,400 –> 00:28:10,560
is rarely the one with the most elegant title on their LinkedIn profile.
769
00:28:10,560 –> 00:28:14,520
Instead, it is the person who can release the next step, the one with the historical context
770
00:28:14,520 –> 00:28:16,680
or the person who knows where the file actually lives.
771
00:28:16,680 –> 00:28:19,280
They might be the only one who still has access to an old workspace
772
00:28:19,280 –> 00:28:21,760
or the one who can validate if a number is current.
773
00:28:21,760 –> 00:28:24,000
Everyone quietly waits for this person before acting,
774
00:28:24,000 –> 00:28:25,680
and that is where the real power sits.
775
00:28:25,680 –> 00:28:30,440
If you look closely, organizations accumulate this kind of power in very uneven ways,
776
00:28:30,440 –> 00:28:33,440
and it usually happens by drift rather than by design.
777
00:28:33,440 –> 00:28:35,720
A platform owner gets copied into every email
778
00:28:35,720 –> 00:28:38,360
because they understand the logic behind the structure
779
00:28:38,360 –> 00:28:41,440
while a long tenured coordinator becomes the default router
780
00:28:41,440 –> 00:28:44,680
because nobody trusts the process without them.
781
00:28:44,680 –> 00:28:48,320
Sometimes a single manager keeps inherited permissions across multiple environments,
782
00:28:48,320 –> 00:28:51,560
which means every cross-functional issue eventually lands on their desk.
783
00:28:51,560 –> 00:28:54,520
From a system perspective, these are not just random dependencies,
784
00:28:54,520 –> 00:28:58,240
they are concentrated control points that make the organization dangerous.
785
00:28:58,240 –> 00:29:01,760
It is a single point of failure where one person carries too much context
786
00:29:01,760 –> 00:29:03,520
and informal approval authority.
787
00:29:03,520 –> 00:29:07,040
The organization might still function under stable conditions,
788
00:29:07,040 –> 00:29:09,480
but the moment that person leaves or becomes overloaded,
789
00:29:09,480 –> 00:29:11,760
the entire throughput of the business drops.
790
00:29:11,760 –> 00:29:14,280
This doesn’t happen because the other people are incapable,
791
00:29:14,280 –> 00:29:19,320
but because the structure never distributed what the business actually depends on to survive.
792
00:29:19,320 –> 00:29:23,440
This is why I am very careful when I hear leaders use the language of key people
793
00:29:23,440 –> 00:29:24,920
to describe their best employees.
794
00:29:24,920 –> 00:29:29,360
They celebrate these individuals as high performers or glue people who hold everything together,
795
00:29:29,360 –> 00:29:33,160
and while they are often talented, we should ask a harder structural question.
796
00:29:33,160 –> 00:29:35,960
Why does the organization require glue in that exact place?
797
00:29:35,960 –> 00:29:39,360
And why does one person need to bridge what the design failed to connect?
798
00:29:39,360 –> 00:29:42,240
If one person holds the relationship map and the access rights,
799
00:29:42,240 –> 00:29:46,120
your performance is not resilient, it is concentrated, and concentration is risk.
800
00:29:46,120 –> 00:29:48,640
You can see this risk in everyday enterprise behavior
801
00:29:48,640 –> 00:29:52,840
when people bypass the formal queue to message one specific person directly.
802
00:29:52,840 –> 00:29:57,120
Approvals often wait for informal validation before anyone hits the submit button
803
00:29:57,120 –> 00:30:00,080
and documents sit in shared spaces that nobody trusts
804
00:30:00,080 –> 00:30:02,920
until one known individual confirms they are correct.
805
00:30:02,920 –> 00:30:04,760
A workflow might exist on paper,
806
00:30:04,760 –> 00:30:07,640
but everyone knows who really decides whether it moves.
807
00:30:07,640 –> 00:30:11,720
This means your governance says one thing while your operational dependency says another,
808
00:30:11,720 –> 00:30:16,400
forcing leaders to manage an authority model that no longer matches business reality.
809
00:30:16,400 –> 00:30:19,320
This matters even more in Microsoft 365 environments
810
00:30:19,320 –> 00:30:24,240
because access is scalable and one permission decision can shape the behavior of hundreds of people.
811
00:30:24,240 –> 00:30:27,040
One legacy owner can become a bottleneck for an entire process,
812
00:30:27,040 –> 00:30:31,240
or one badly governed group can make sensitive information public to the wrong audience
813
00:30:31,240 –> 00:30:34,120
while the right people are still waiting for access.
814
00:30:34,120 –> 00:30:36,600
The access layer does not just reflect your structure.
815
00:30:36,600 –> 00:30:40,560
It actively produces it by shaping who becomes central and who becomes invisible.
816
00:30:40,560 –> 00:30:44,600
Once that pattern hardens, the org chart becomes less useful as an execution map
817
00:30:44,600 –> 00:30:47,800
because it explains reporting but no longer explains control.
818
00:30:47,800 –> 00:30:51,440
If structural resilience matters to you, then redundancy must matter too,
819
00:30:51,440 –> 00:30:54,080
which means you need more than one person with the right context
820
00:30:54,080 –> 00:30:56,480
and more than one path to retrieve knowledge.
821
00:30:56,480 –> 00:30:59,520
Otherwise, the business is not coordinated, it is dependent.
822
00:30:59,520 –> 00:31:04,320
Dependency hidden inside access design is one of the easiest ways to create fragility
823
00:31:04,320 –> 00:31:06,600
while still looking organized on the surface.
824
00:31:06,600 –> 00:31:11,640
When we overlay these signals, something important starts to happen that changes how we view the company.
825
00:31:11,640 –> 00:31:13,600
Teams shows us the coordination pressure,
826
00:31:13,600 –> 00:31:16,400
SharePoint shows the fragmentation of knowledge and permissions
827
00:31:16,400 –> 00:31:18,840
show us where the real control sits.
828
00:31:18,840 –> 00:31:21,120
Once you see those three signals together,
829
00:31:21,120 –> 00:31:24,520
the real organization finally starts to come into focus.
830
00:31:24,520 –> 00:31:28,480
When you overlay activity, content and access, the real org appears.
831
00:31:28,480 –> 00:31:31,520
This is the point where isolated symptoms stop looking like accidents
832
00:31:31,520 –> 00:31:33,440
and start looking like a system outcome.
833
00:31:33,440 –> 00:31:37,200
Any one of these signals on its own is easy to explain away as a minor issue.
834
00:31:37,200 –> 00:31:41,200
You might see high-teams activity and assume people are just engaged
835
00:31:41,200 –> 00:31:44,080
or see duplicate files and blame them on bad habits.
836
00:31:44,080 –> 00:31:46,640
Even messy permissions can be dismissed as technical debt
837
00:31:46,640 –> 00:31:49,440
but when you overlay activity, content and access,
838
00:31:49,440 –> 00:31:51,760
the pattern becomes much harder to ignore.
839
00:31:51,760 –> 00:31:54,440
Now you are no longer looking at separate admin problems.
840
00:31:54,440 –> 00:31:58,600
You are looking at one operating model expressing itself through three different surfaces.
841
00:31:58,600 –> 00:32:01,640
That is when the real organization becomes legible
842
00:32:01,640 –> 00:32:05,240
and you see teams sprawl and message density for what they really are.
843
00:32:05,240 –> 00:32:09,240
You see duplicated documents and personal storage acting as fallback infrastructure
844
00:32:09,240 –> 00:32:11,000
because the official system failed.
845
00:32:11,000 –> 00:32:13,720
Then you see permission drift and access concentrated
846
00:32:13,720 –> 00:32:16,600
in the hands of people, the org chart barely even acknowledges.
847
00:32:16,600 –> 00:32:20,680
When you put those pieces together, a very specific picture starts to emerge
848
00:32:20,680 –> 00:32:24,200
of high activity mixed with low clarity and hidden control points.
849
00:32:24,200 –> 00:32:27,400
That is not a mature organization with a few cleanup issues.
850
00:32:27,400 –> 00:32:31,400
It is a business running on workarounds that only look collaborative from a distance.
851
00:32:31,400 –> 00:32:34,360
I keep saying the real organization is visible through movement
852
00:32:34,360 –> 00:32:39,480
because messages, documents and permissions capture how the company actually behaves under pressure.
853
00:32:39,480 –> 00:32:42,120
Formal processes describe how work is intended to flow
854
00:32:42,120 –> 00:32:44,520
but telemetry shows how it actually flows.
855
00:32:44,520 –> 00:32:47,560
And the gap between those two is where the truth lives.
856
00:32:47,560 –> 00:32:50,120
If a decision path looks simple on a process map
857
00:32:50,120 –> 00:32:54,120
but requires 15 chat messages and an unofficial approver to finish,
858
00:32:54,120 –> 00:32:55,880
then that map is just an aspiration.
859
00:32:55,880 –> 00:32:58,520
The operating model is the sequence that really happened
860
00:32:58,520 –> 00:33:02,440
and once you accept that a lot of familiar enterprise language starts to sound different.
861
00:33:02,440 –> 00:33:05,880
Collaboration might actually be a nice word for repeated reconciliation
862
00:33:05,880 –> 00:33:10,600
across fragmented teams and flexibility might just mean people are routing around a weak structure.
863
00:33:10,600 –> 00:33:15,880
When leaders praise responsiveness, they might actually be seeing a few overloaded individuals
864
00:33:15,880 –> 00:33:17,480
holding the system together manually.
865
00:33:17,480 –> 00:33:19,000
This is not a failure of the people.
866
00:33:19,000 –> 00:33:22,040
It is a failure of how we read the design of the system.
867
00:33:22,040 –> 00:33:25,720
Leaders often mistake local adaptation for organizational health
868
00:33:25,720 –> 00:33:28,040
but adaptation is not the same thing as resilience.
869
00:33:28,040 –> 00:33:32,600
Sometimes people adapt so well that they hide the real cost of the structure they are compensating for
870
00:33:32,600 –> 00:33:35,320
which is why the overlay matters so much.
871
00:33:35,320 –> 00:33:36,840
Each signal validates the others.
872
00:33:36,840 –> 00:33:40,680
Teams tells you where the load is rising, content tells you where understanding is failing
873
00:33:40,680 –> 00:33:43,720
and access tells you where authority has actually settled.
874
00:33:43,720 –> 00:33:47,960
Together these signals reveal whether the organization is executing through designed flow
875
00:33:47,960 –> 00:33:49,960
or through accumulated compensation.
876
00:33:49,960 –> 00:33:54,120
In many enterprises it is quiet, persistent and expensive compensation that keeps the business
877
00:33:54,120 –> 00:33:56,440
moving through extra effort and constant waiting.
878
00:33:56,440 –> 00:34:00,520
This creates a dangerous illusion where the organization looks functional from the outside
879
00:34:00,520 –> 00:34:03,000
because people are active and work is getting delivered.
880
00:34:03,000 –> 00:34:06,760
The system appears stable only because the people inside it are carrying structural debt
881
00:34:06,760 –> 00:34:08,040
manually every single day.
882
00:34:08,040 –> 00:34:11,960
That distinction matters because if you automate on top of that debt, you don’t remove it.
883
00:34:11,960 –> 00:34:13,160
You simply scale the problem.
884
00:34:13,160 –> 00:34:16,440
If you add AI on top of that mess, you don’t create clarity.
885
00:34:16,440 –> 00:34:19,800
You just expose the existing ambiguity much faster than before.
886
00:34:19,800 –> 00:34:23,560
Many organizations are still trying to improve performance by optimizing single tools
887
00:34:23,560 –> 00:34:25,720
like cleaning up teams or fixing SharePoint.
888
00:34:25,720 –> 00:34:30,600
While that is useful work, partial treatment often misses the combined behavior that drives the whole system.
889
00:34:30,600 –> 00:34:32,600
The real insight does not sit in the tool alone,
890
00:34:32,600 –> 00:34:36,280
but in the relationship between how conversation pressure creates duplication
891
00:34:36,280 –> 00:34:39,960
and how that duplication increases dependency on a few individuals.
892
00:34:39,960 –> 00:34:44,760
That is a loop and loops are where system behavior becomes persistent and difficult to change.
893
00:34:44,760 –> 00:34:49,080
If you want to understand the real organization, don’t just inspect one platform at a time.
894
00:34:49,080 –> 00:34:51,560
Instead, overlay the signals and follow the movement.
895
00:34:51,560 –> 00:34:53,960
The business is not running on the structure you documented,
896
00:34:53,960 –> 00:34:58,120
but on the pathways people keep using because the official ones lack enough clarity and speed.
897
00:34:58,120 –> 00:35:03,160
Once you see that pattern clearly, you will recognize the organization that looks well structured
898
00:35:03,160 –> 00:35:06,280
from the outside but feels surprisingly slow from the inside.
899
00:35:06,280 –> 00:35:08,760
The well structured, slow organization.
900
00:35:08,760 –> 00:35:11,880
Let me make this concrete with a pattern I’ve seen more than once
901
00:35:11,880 –> 00:35:14,040
in a large organization of over 5,000 people.
902
00:35:14,040 –> 00:35:17,000
This company had strong Microsoft 365 adoption,
903
00:35:17,000 –> 00:35:21,400
clear governance language and a leadership team that felt confident in their digital strategy.
904
00:35:21,400 –> 00:35:24,280
If you walked in cold and looked only at the formal layer,
905
00:35:24,280 –> 00:35:26,440
you would probably call the environment mature.
906
00:35:26,440 –> 00:35:29,560
They had established collaboration policies and naming standards.
907
00:35:29,560 –> 00:35:32,440
And their share point structures followed clear ownership models.
908
00:35:32,440 –> 00:35:35,560
Platform decisions had already been socialized and approved across the business,
909
00:35:35,560 –> 00:35:39,400
which meant teams were active and sites existed for every major function.
910
00:35:39,400 –> 00:35:42,920
Even Power Platform was being used and the leadership team was discussing
911
00:35:42,920 –> 00:35:46,920
co-pilot as a logical next step for productivity rather than just a novelty.
912
00:35:46,920 –> 00:35:51,640
On paper, this was not an organization in chaos and it certainly didn’t look broken or immature.
913
00:35:51,640 –> 00:35:55,640
It looked disciplined and that is exactly why the problem was so easy to miss.
914
00:35:55,640 –> 00:35:59,560
The surface told a very convincing story of coherence and digital maturity,
915
00:35:59,560 –> 00:36:03,400
suggesting they had already done the hard work of standardizing how people collaborate.
916
00:36:03,400 –> 00:36:06,920
Leadership believed that story because the evidence supporting it was real.
917
00:36:06,920 –> 00:36:12,120
Usage metrics were high, governance rules existed and people knew which tools were approved for their work.
918
00:36:12,120 –> 00:36:15,880
There was no obvious platform rebellion or dramatic fragmentation across 10 different
919
00:36:15,880 –> 00:36:21,160
collaboration stacks, so from a distance it looked like a company that had moved into operational readiness.
920
00:36:21,160 –> 00:36:25,320
But the daily experience inside the system felt very different because work was slow.
921
00:36:25,320 –> 00:36:28,520
It wasn’t visibly slow in a way that showed up as total in activity,
922
00:36:28,520 –> 00:36:31,400
but it was slow in the way many enterprise environments are slow.
923
00:36:31,400 –> 00:36:34,600
Everything required extra alignment and people kept checking with each other
924
00:36:34,600 –> 00:36:37,560
because decisions only moved after repeated clarification.
925
00:36:37,560 –> 00:36:41,080
The same issues surfaced in slightly different forms across different teams.
926
00:36:41,080 –> 00:36:44,280
And while documents existed, confidence in the information did not.
927
00:36:44,280 –> 00:36:48,440
Ownership had names on a chart, but execution kept depending on a smaller,
928
00:36:48,440 –> 00:36:52,680
less visible group of people who actually understood how to get things across the line.
929
00:36:52,680 –> 00:36:55,320
The organization had structure, but it did not have flow,
930
00:36:55,320 –> 00:36:57,880
and that is a critical distinction for any system builder.
931
00:36:57,880 –> 00:37:01,640
Once you start looking through that lens, the contradiction becomes easier to understand.
932
00:37:01,640 –> 00:37:04,200
The formal environment was well structured enough to create legitimacy,
933
00:37:04,200 –> 00:37:06,760
but it wasn’t well aligned enough to actually reduce friction.
934
00:37:06,760 –> 00:37:09,480
People inside the system were compensating constantly,
935
00:37:09,480 –> 00:37:12,920
not because they were failing, but because they were the ones keeping the business moving.
936
00:37:12,920 –> 00:37:15,400
I remember sitting with leaders in an environment like this,
937
00:37:15,400 –> 00:37:18,360
and hearing them say they didn’t understand why things still felt so heavy.
938
00:37:18,360 –> 00:37:23,480
That’s a revealing sentence because heaviness is usually what coordinated fragmentation feels like from the inside.
939
00:37:23,480 –> 00:37:25,480
You have the tools, the standards, and the policies,
940
00:37:25,480 –> 00:37:27,080
but you still don’t have clean movement.
941
00:37:27,080 –> 00:37:29,480
Every outcome costs more coordination than it should,
942
00:37:29,480 –> 00:37:33,160
and the organization starts confusing high effort with business complexity.
943
00:37:33,160 –> 00:37:36,920
A process feels hard, so people assume the business is just naturally complex.
944
00:37:36,920 –> 00:37:42,040
But often the real issue is that the structure is asking human effort to compensate for weak interfaces
945
00:37:42,040 –> 00:37:43,800
and hidden dependency points.
946
00:37:43,800 –> 00:37:47,560
From a system perspective that isn’t maturity, it’s manual stabilization.
947
00:37:47,560 –> 00:37:50,120
Manual stabilization can look impressive for a long time,
948
00:37:50,120 –> 00:37:53,480
because the people inside the system become highly skilled at carrying the load.
949
00:37:53,480 –> 00:37:57,480
They know who to ask, where to look, and when to trust the official route versus the informal one.
950
00:37:57,480 –> 00:37:59,240
They know which document is technically current,
951
00:37:59,240 –> 00:38:00,520
and which one is actually usable,
952
00:38:00,520 –> 00:38:04,120
so the business keeps functioning through adaptation rather than clean design.
953
00:38:04,120 –> 00:38:09,080
Leadership was looking at a well-structured organization while the people inside it were living in a slow one.
954
00:38:09,080 –> 00:38:10,920
Both views were technically true,
955
00:38:10,920 –> 00:38:13,720
which is what makes this pattern so important to understand.
956
00:38:13,720 –> 00:38:16,120
The organization was not failing in an obvious way,
957
00:38:16,120 –> 00:38:19,320
but it was succeeding through constant human compensation.
958
00:38:19,320 –> 00:38:22,840
This meant the true cause stayed hidden until you stopped looking at the surface
959
00:38:22,840 –> 00:38:26,520
and started watching how work actually moved through the environment.
960
00:38:26,520 –> 00:38:28,520
What the surface suggested.
961
00:38:28,520 –> 00:38:30,120
If you were part of the leadership team,
962
00:38:30,120 –> 00:38:32,520
the surface of this organization suggested control.
963
00:38:32,520 –> 00:38:36,360
No serious executive believes a 5,000-person company is perfectly frictionless,
964
00:38:36,360 –> 00:38:40,440
but the structural order was enough that the remaining problems looked local and manageable.
965
00:38:40,440 –> 00:38:42,120
The architecture deck looked clean,
966
00:38:42,120 –> 00:38:45,000
and there was a rational platform story that everyone could follow.
967
00:38:45,000 –> 00:38:48,120
Teams was for collaboration, SharePoint handled structured content,
968
00:38:48,120 –> 00:38:49,960
and OneDrive was for personal work,
969
00:38:49,960 –> 00:38:52,760
while Power Platform sat ready for workflow improvement.
970
00:38:52,760 –> 00:38:57,000
Security was wrapped around the environment in a way that felt considered rather than improvised,
971
00:38:57,000 –> 00:39:00,360
and because ownership models and decision forums existed,
972
00:39:00,360 –> 00:39:03,000
leadership had a reasonable basis for confidence.
973
00:39:03,000 –> 00:39:05,480
This was not executive blindness in a caricature sense,
974
00:39:05,480 –> 00:39:07,160
but something much more subtle.
975
00:39:07,160 –> 00:39:10,360
They were reading the environment through the signals they had been taught to trust,
976
00:39:10,360 –> 00:39:13,960
such as rollout success, adoption metrics, and governance compliance.
977
00:39:13,960 –> 00:39:15,480
Those are not meaningless signals,
978
00:39:15,480 –> 00:39:17,800
but they aren’t enough to tell the whole story.
979
00:39:17,800 –> 00:39:20,280
From the surface, high usage looked like maturity,
980
00:39:20,280 –> 00:39:22,360
and if teams was active across the business,
981
00:39:22,360 –> 00:39:24,360
that seemed like a positive indicator.
982
00:39:24,360 –> 00:39:27,000
If SharePoint sites were provisioned according to the standard,
983
00:39:27,000 –> 00:39:29,800
and people weren’t demanding new tools outside the approved stack,
984
00:39:29,800 –> 00:39:32,200
it felt like the collaboration model was working.
985
00:39:32,200 –> 00:39:35,160
All of this created a very specific leadership narrative
986
00:39:35,160 –> 00:39:37,480
about having a strong digital foundation.
987
00:39:37,480 –> 00:39:39,800
They believed they had standardized the environment
988
00:39:39,800 –> 00:39:43,160
and reduced platform chaos, making them transformation ready.
989
00:39:43,160 –> 00:39:44,600
That narrative is understandable,
990
00:39:44,600 –> 00:39:46,440
but it also hides something dangerous
991
00:39:46,440 –> 00:39:49,960
by treating visible order as proof of operational coherence.
992
00:39:49,960 –> 00:39:52,600
A clean architecture model can describe intent very well,
993
00:39:52,600 –> 00:39:55,400
but it cannot prove that execution is flowing through that model
994
00:39:55,400 –> 00:39:57,160
in the way leaders imagine.
995
00:39:57,160 –> 00:39:59,320
Still, the governance language was mature,
996
00:39:59,320 –> 00:40:01,720
and people used the right words like life cycle,
997
00:40:01,720 –> 00:40:04,120
information architecture, and access control.
998
00:40:04,120 –> 00:40:07,160
The organization sounded disciplined because in many ways it was,
999
00:40:07,160 –> 00:40:10,200
but discipline at the policy layer can easily coexist
1000
00:40:10,200 –> 00:40:12,360
with fragmentation at the behavior layer.
1001
00:40:12,360 –> 00:40:14,760
That is the part many leadership teams miss,
1002
00:40:14,760 –> 00:40:17,800
because signals presented upward are usually about deployment,
1003
00:40:17,800 –> 00:40:18,760
not friction.
1004
00:40:18,760 –> 00:40:20,440
Reports show how many teams were created,
1005
00:40:20,440 –> 00:40:21,640
how many users were active,
1006
00:40:21,640 –> 00:40:24,120
and how many workflows were launched quarter over quarter.
1007
00:40:24,120 –> 00:40:27,320
Those metrics tell you that the environment exists and is being used,
1008
00:40:27,320 –> 00:40:31,400
but they do not tell you whether the organization has become easier to operate inside.
1009
00:40:31,400 –> 00:40:32,920
If you don’t ask that second question,
1010
00:40:32,920 –> 00:40:35,160
surface maturity becomes very persuasive.
1011
00:40:35,160 –> 00:40:37,160
In this case, leadership had every reason
1012
00:40:37,160 –> 00:40:39,320
to think the organization was structurally healthy
1013
00:40:39,320 –> 00:40:41,240
because the standards and tools were all there,
1014
00:40:41,240 –> 00:40:43,240
even the language of accountability was present,
1015
00:40:43,240 –> 00:40:45,880
so when outcomes remained slow or repetitive,
1016
00:40:45,880 –> 00:40:49,000
the explanation naturally drifted towards the people involved.
1017
00:40:49,000 –> 00:40:50,920
They assumed teams needed more enablement
1018
00:40:50,920 –> 00:40:53,720
or that managers needed to reinforce better habits.
1019
00:40:53,720 –> 00:40:55,640
Maybe some functions were lagging in adoption,
1020
00:40:55,640 –> 00:40:58,600
or perhaps employees were over-collaborating out of caution.
1021
00:40:58,600 –> 00:41:00,440
All of these were plausible explanations,
1022
00:41:00,440 –> 00:41:03,240
but noticed that the structure was being assumed correct
1023
00:41:03,240 –> 00:41:05,240
while the problem was being assigned downstream.
1024
00:41:05,240 –> 00:41:08,200
This is a common executive move in digitally mature environments
1025
00:41:08,200 –> 00:41:10,280
because once the formal model looks complete,
1026
00:41:10,280 –> 00:41:13,080
friction gets interpreted as execution in consistency,
1027
00:41:13,080 –> 00:41:16,040
they didn’t see it as evidence that the model itself might not
1028
00:41:16,040 –> 00:41:17,720
describe how real work happens.
1029
00:41:17,720 –> 00:41:21,400
The surface suggested a company that had already solved the hard part
1030
00:41:21,400 –> 00:41:24,040
of platform choice and architecture stability.
1031
00:41:24,040 –> 00:41:27,400
From that angle, the remaining work looked like simple optimization,
1032
00:41:27,400 –> 00:41:29,320
tuning and incremental training.
1033
00:41:29,320 –> 00:41:31,080
When a system produces slowness,
1034
00:41:31,080 –> 00:41:33,160
despite this level of visible maturity,
1035
00:41:33,160 –> 00:41:35,720
the real issue is usually underneath the surface model
1036
00:41:35,720 –> 00:41:37,320
rather than at its edges.
1037
00:41:37,320 –> 00:41:39,080
This organization was a useful case
1038
00:41:39,080 –> 00:41:41,480
because nothing on the surface looked irresponsible
1039
00:41:41,480 –> 00:41:42,680
or obviously broken.
1040
00:41:42,680 –> 00:41:44,360
Leadership confidence was not irrational
1041
00:41:44,360 –> 00:41:45,720
but it was certainly incomplete.
1042
00:41:45,720 –> 00:41:48,120
What they were seeing was the designed organization
1043
00:41:48,120 –> 00:41:50,200
but they were not yet seeing the behavioral one.
1044
00:41:50,200 –> 00:41:52,120
Once we shifted from surface indicators
1045
00:41:52,120 –> 00:41:54,200
to the actual movement inside the environment,
1046
00:41:54,200 –> 00:41:55,400
the story changed fast.
1047
00:41:55,400 –> 00:41:57,400
If you audited your own structural resilience
1048
00:41:57,400 –> 00:41:59,240
the same way you audited your systems,
1049
00:41:59,240 –> 00:42:01,560
you might find that your people are working much harder
1050
00:42:01,560 –> 00:42:03,240
than the design requires.
1051
00:42:03,240 –> 00:42:04,760
What the behavior revealed?
1052
00:42:04,760 –> 00:42:07,080
What the behavior revealed was much less tidy
1053
00:42:07,080 –> 00:42:09,320
than the official organizational chart suggested.
1054
00:42:09,320 –> 00:42:11,800
The environment wasn’t chaotic in a dramatic or loud sense
1055
00:42:11,800 –> 00:42:14,200
nor was it obviously dysfunctional to a casual observant.
1056
00:42:14,200 –> 00:42:17,000
Instead, it was fragmented in a very coordinated way
1057
00:42:17,000 –> 00:42:18,200
and that distinction matters
1058
00:42:18,200 –> 00:42:19,960
because the organization had enough discipline
1059
00:42:19,960 –> 00:42:21,400
to avoid a visible collapse
1060
00:42:21,400 –> 00:42:22,920
but lacked the structural coherence
1061
00:42:22,920 –> 00:42:25,320
to reduce the manual effort required to keep work moving.
1062
00:42:25,320 –> 00:42:29,320
The first thing that stood out was the Microsoft Teams pattern.
1063
00:42:29,320 –> 00:42:31,640
There were hundreds of teams spread across functions,
1064
00:42:31,640 –> 00:42:33,400
initiatives and management layers
1065
00:42:33,400 –> 00:42:35,720
but that number alone wasn’t the primary issue.
1066
00:42:35,720 –> 00:42:38,280
The real problem was the logic underneath the structure
1067
00:42:38,280 –> 00:42:39,960
where channel setups were inconsistent
1068
00:42:39,960 –> 00:42:41,800
and some teams were broad and overloaded
1069
00:42:41,800 –> 00:42:44,440
while others sat highly specific and lightly used.
1070
00:42:44,440 –> 00:42:45,800
Private channels kept appearing
1071
00:42:45,800 –> 00:42:48,920
whenever cross-functional work became sensitive or politically difficult
1072
00:42:48,920 –> 00:42:50,520
and when decisions actually mattered,
1073
00:42:50,520 –> 00:42:53,800
people often left the shared space entirely to move into private chats
1074
00:42:53,800 –> 00:42:55,080
and small trusted groups.
1075
00:42:55,080 –> 00:42:58,840
While the formal collaboration layer existed on paper,
1076
00:42:58,840 –> 00:43:02,120
the real execution layer sat one level underneath it in the shadows.
1077
00:43:02,120 –> 00:43:04,600
Then we looked at how content moved through the system
1078
00:43:04,600 –> 00:43:07,240
and this is where the friction became even easier to see.
1079
00:43:07,240 –> 00:43:09,640
The same documents were showing up in multiple locations
1080
00:43:09,640 –> 00:43:10,920
across SharePoint and OneDrive
1081
00:43:10,920 –> 00:43:13,880
because teams were holding local copies they could control.
1082
00:43:13,880 –> 00:43:16,360
They didn’t trust retrieval speed or findability
1083
00:43:16,360 –> 00:43:18,360
and they certainly didn’t trust that the shared version
1084
00:43:18,360 –> 00:43:21,000
would remain stable long enough to work from.
1085
00:43:21,000 –> 00:43:22,920
Nobody framed it as a lack of trust of course
1086
00:43:22,920 –> 00:43:24,840
because people described it as being practical
1087
00:43:24,840 –> 00:43:28,200
or just keeping things moving to make sure they had what they needed.
1088
00:43:28,200 –> 00:43:30,200
Locally, that behavior made perfect sense
1089
00:43:30,200 –> 00:43:33,560
but across the organization it produced multiple versions of the truth
1090
00:43:33,560 –> 00:43:36,520
because the environment wasn’t giving them enough confidence
1091
00:43:36,520 –> 00:43:38,840
to work from one authoritative source.
1092
00:43:38,840 –> 00:43:41,160
Every new copy solved a local problem
1093
00:43:41,160 –> 00:43:43,400
while simultaneously creating a structural one.
1094
00:43:43,400 –> 00:43:46,200
The people patterns provided the clearest signal of all.
1095
00:43:46,200 –> 00:43:48,920
The same few individuals kept appearing as informal checkpoints
1096
00:43:48,920 –> 00:43:51,160
across completely unrelated processes
1097
00:43:51,160 –> 00:43:53,560
and these weren’t always senior leaders or formal owners.
1098
00:43:53,560 –> 00:43:55,880
These were the people who knew where things really were
1099
00:43:55,880 –> 00:43:57,240
who held the historical context
1100
00:43:57,240 –> 00:44:00,680
and who understood which version of a file could actually be trusted.
1101
00:44:00,680 –> 00:44:02,840
That is where the operating model was actually concentrated,
1102
00:44:02,840 –> 00:44:04,440
sitting in human dependency hubs
1103
00:44:04,440 –> 00:44:06,040
rather than the published ownership chart.
1104
00:44:06,040 –> 00:44:08,520
Once you saw that the whole organization read differently
1105
00:44:08,520 –> 00:44:10,600
and you realized cross-team work was not progressing
1106
00:44:10,600 –> 00:44:11,880
because the design was clean.
1107
00:44:11,880 –> 00:44:14,280
It was progressing because people were compensating
1108
00:44:14,280 –> 00:44:16,520
for broken interfaces in real time
1109
00:44:16,520 –> 00:44:19,480
by carrying context and revalidating knowledge manually
1110
00:44:19,480 –> 00:44:21,880
because these individuals were so good at their jobs.
1111
00:44:21,880 –> 00:44:24,920
Leadership could still believe the system itself was mostly fine.
1112
00:44:24,920 –> 00:44:27,240
This is the trap where a functioning organization
1113
00:44:27,240 –> 00:44:28,600
remains structurally weak
1114
00:44:28,600 –> 00:44:32,120
because the people inside it are absorbing that weakness personally.
1115
00:44:32,120 –> 00:44:35,160
Decisions were moving through sheer effort rather than clarity
1116
00:44:35,160 –> 00:44:37,400
and progress depended on repeated alignment
1117
00:44:37,400 –> 00:44:40,200
and informal confirmation from trusted intermediaries.
1118
00:44:40,200 –> 00:44:42,600
While the surface suggested digital maturity
1119
00:44:42,600 –> 00:44:46,280
the behavior revealed a business running on coordinated fragmentation.
1120
00:44:46,280 –> 00:44:48,040
The tools and standards were in place
1121
00:44:48,040 –> 00:44:50,680
but the flow between people and content was not strong enough
1122
00:44:50,680 –> 00:44:52,440
to carry execution cleanly.
1123
00:44:52,440 –> 00:44:54,920
The real cost was hidden in the repetition of questions,
1124
00:44:54,920 –> 00:44:57,160
file creation and constant explanations.
1125
00:44:57,160 –> 00:44:59,320
The organization felt heavy from the inside
1126
00:44:59,320 –> 00:45:01,000
not because people lacked commitment
1127
00:45:01,000 –> 00:45:03,640
but because the structure kept asking them to do work
1128
00:45:03,640 –> 00:45:05,640
the environment should have already handled.
1129
00:45:05,640 –> 00:45:08,600
People were manually defining ownership, preserving context
1130
00:45:08,600 –> 00:45:10,680
and stabilizing memory every single day.
1131
00:45:10,680 –> 00:45:13,240
Once that became visible the problem statement changed
1132
00:45:13,240 –> 00:45:15,640
from a few adoption gaps to an organization
1133
00:45:15,640 –> 00:45:18,680
that looked stable only because its people had become experts
1134
00:45:18,680 –> 00:45:20,200
at carrying structural debt.
1135
00:45:20,200 –> 00:45:22,520
If the real issue is coordinated fragmentation
1136
00:45:22,520 –> 00:45:25,240
then more activity or more governance language will not fix it.
1137
00:45:25,240 –> 00:45:27,320
You have to reduce the need for constant checking
1138
00:45:27,320 –> 00:45:29,320
and duplicate truth otherwise the business
1139
00:45:29,320 –> 00:45:33,000
keeps paying for apparent stability with invisible effort.
1140
00:45:33,000 –> 00:45:34,520
The real problem was not chaos.
1141
00:45:34,520 –> 00:45:36,440
It was coordinated fragmentation.
1142
00:45:36,440 –> 00:45:40,360
I want to slow down and name this clearly because the real problem was not chaos.
1143
00:45:40,360 –> 00:45:43,720
Chaos is easy to spot and makes executives uncomfortable very quickly
1144
00:45:43,720 –> 00:45:45,480
because it breaks the surface story
1145
00:45:45,480 –> 00:45:48,440
but this organization looked controlled and disciplined.
1146
00:45:48,440 –> 00:45:50,200
It looked like a company with standards
1147
00:45:50,200 –> 00:45:52,440
and competent people doing serious work
1148
00:45:52,440 –> 00:45:55,080
which is exactly why the problem lasted as long as it did.
1149
00:45:55,080 –> 00:45:58,680
What they had was not disorder but coordinated fragmentation
1150
00:45:58,680 –> 00:46:00,280
which is a very different condition.
1151
00:46:00,280 –> 00:46:03,160
Fragmentation means the parts do not fit together cleanly
1152
00:46:03,160 –> 00:46:05,560
while coordination means people are working constantly
1153
00:46:05,560 –> 00:46:07,320
to make those parts function anyway.
1154
00:46:07,320 –> 00:46:10,120
The business still produces outcomes and projects still move
1155
00:46:10,120 –> 00:46:12,440
but the organization is consuming far more energy
1156
00:46:12,440 –> 00:46:14,200
than it should just remain coherent.
1157
00:46:14,200 –> 00:46:16,680
Teams created coordination without shared context
1158
00:46:16,680 –> 00:46:19,640
and SharePoint stored content without creating authoritative knowledge.
1159
00:46:19,640 –> 00:46:22,760
Each piece of the tech stack was useful and solved something real
1160
00:46:22,760 –> 00:46:25,400
but the combined environment did not reduce ambiguity
1161
00:46:25,400 –> 00:46:27,240
enough for the organization to flow.
1162
00:46:27,240 –> 00:46:30,840
People became the integration layer by carrying meaning across tools
1163
00:46:30,840 –> 00:46:32,760
and repairing uncertainty in real time.
1164
00:46:32,760 –> 00:46:37,400
Because they kept succeeding, leadership continued to believe the system was broadly working.
1165
00:46:37,400 –> 00:46:40,040
A system that works through constant compensation
1166
00:46:40,040 –> 00:46:42,360
is not stable in the way leaders think it is.
1167
00:46:42,360 –> 00:46:46,200
It is stable only because the people inside it are continuously absorbing the shock
1168
00:46:46,200 –> 00:46:48,760
which isn’t resilience, it’s structural compensation.
1169
00:46:48,760 –> 00:46:51,000
Structural compensation always has limits
1170
00:46:51,000 –> 00:46:54,840
whether that limit is growth, leadership change, or the introduction of AI
1171
00:46:54,840 –> 00:46:57,160
eventually something puts more pressure on the environment
1172
00:46:57,160 –> 00:46:59,160
than the people can comfortably carry
1173
00:46:59,160 –> 00:47:01,560
and then what looked efficient suddenly feels brittle.
1174
00:47:01,560 –> 00:47:05,160
Many enterprises are not broken in the sense of obvious failure.
1175
00:47:05,160 –> 00:47:07,720
They are simply overloaded with hidden coordination work
1176
00:47:07,720 –> 00:47:11,000
and function through habit and trusted intermediaries.
1177
00:47:11,000 –> 00:47:13,240
The business was paying for coherence manually
1178
00:47:13,240 –> 00:47:16,920
through every duplicate file, side chat, and informal checkpoint.
1179
00:47:16,920 –> 00:47:19,400
Once you see it that way, common transformation moves
1180
00:47:19,400 –> 00:47:22,360
like automating a fragmented process start to look dangerous
1181
00:47:22,360 –> 00:47:25,240
because you may just be accelerating a bad dependency pattern.
1182
00:47:25,240 –> 00:47:28,280
If you scale co-pilot into a fragmented knowledge environment
1183
00:47:28,280 –> 00:47:30,280
you don’t necessarily create intelligence.
1184
00:47:30,280 –> 00:47:32,360
You might just surface contradictions faster.
1185
00:47:32,360 –> 00:47:34,600
Adding more governance on top of fragmentation
1186
00:47:34,600 –> 00:47:36,680
often makes the visible structure cleaner
1187
00:47:36,680 –> 00:47:39,000
while leaving the real execution burden untouched.
1188
00:47:39,000 –> 00:47:41,880
The wrong diagnosis always produces the wrong intervention
1189
00:47:41,880 –> 00:47:44,040
so if leaders think the problem is user discipline
1190
00:47:44,040 –> 00:47:45,560
they will just add more training.
1191
00:47:45,560 –> 00:47:47,720
If they think the problem is insufficient collaboration
1192
00:47:47,720 –> 00:47:49,560
they will add more collaboration spaces
1193
00:47:49,560 –> 00:47:52,760
but more effort inside the same pattern only deepens the load.
1194
00:47:52,760 –> 00:47:55,160
The work does not get lighter, it just gets heavier
1195
00:47:55,160 –> 00:47:57,160
and then becomes normalized as the new standard.
1196
00:47:57,160 –> 00:48:00,520
The breakthrough here was recognizing that the system looked stable
1197
00:48:00,520 –> 00:48:03,240
only because people were carrying structural debt manually.
1198
00:48:03,240 –> 00:48:06,760
The executive question changed from how to get people to collaborate more
1199
00:48:06,760 –> 00:48:09,560
to why the organization required so much coordination
1200
00:48:09,560 –> 00:48:10,680
just to stay aligned.
1201
00:48:10,680 –> 00:48:12,520
That question changes everything itself.
1202
00:48:12,520 –> 00:48:16,520
Decision latency, the cost no one sees until it compounds.
1203
00:48:16,520 –> 00:48:18,280
This brings me to a specific business cost
1204
00:48:18,280 –> 00:48:21,080
that usually sits right underneath everything we’ve discussed
1205
00:48:21,080 –> 00:48:23,080
and that cost is decision latency.
1206
00:48:23,080 –> 00:48:25,560
I’m not just talking about slow decisions in the obvious sense
1207
00:48:25,560 –> 00:48:28,120
like a board of directors taking too long to vote
1208
00:48:28,120 –> 00:48:31,640
or a procurement cycle that everyone loves to complain about.
1209
00:48:31,640 –> 00:48:34,760
I mean the cumulative delay between an event happening
1210
00:48:34,760 –> 00:48:37,160
someone finally understanding what it means
1211
00:48:37,160 –> 00:48:39,640
and the organization actually taking action on it.
1212
00:48:39,640 –> 00:48:42,600
That gap sounds abstract until you look at where it actually lives
1213
00:48:42,600 –> 00:48:43,640
in your daily workflow.
1214
00:48:43,640 –> 00:48:46,520
It lives in the dead air between a message and a response
1215
00:48:46,520 –> 00:48:48,040
or the space between that response
1216
00:48:48,040 –> 00:48:49,880
and the inevitable request for clarification.
1217
00:48:49,880 –> 00:48:51,800
You see it in the gap between the clarification
1218
00:48:51,800 –> 00:48:52,840
and the scheduled meeting
1219
00:48:52,840 –> 00:48:54,280
and then again between that meeting
1220
00:48:54,280 –> 00:48:56,920
and the final version everyone feels safe enough to approve.
1221
00:48:56,920 –> 00:49:00,040
This is where time simply disappears in modern organizations
1222
00:49:00,040 –> 00:49:03,080
and because none of these small delays look dramatic on their own
1223
00:49:03,080 –> 00:49:05,800
they almost never get treated like a structural failure.
1224
00:49:05,800 –> 00:49:07,480
Instead we treat them like normal work.
1225
00:49:07,480 –> 00:49:11,000
A document sits for two hours because one person is stuck in meetings
1226
00:49:11,000 –> 00:49:14,360
or a manager waits until tomorrow to confirm a single number
1227
00:49:14,360 –> 00:49:15,960
and suddenly a day is gone.
1228
00:49:15,960 –> 00:49:17,560
Teams will often run one more review
1229
00:49:17,560 –> 00:49:19,960
because they aren’t sure if finance saw the latest change
1230
00:49:19,960 –> 00:49:22,280
or they’ll start a side chat to reduce risk
1231
00:49:22,280 –> 00:49:24,200
before moving to a formal step.
1232
00:49:24,200 –> 00:49:26,680
While no single pause looks expensive by itself
1233
00:49:26,680 –> 00:49:29,080
the total accumulation of these moments is devastating.
1234
00:49:29,080 –> 00:49:30,920
That is the reality of decision latency
1235
00:49:30,920 –> 00:49:33,320
and the reason it matters is actually quite simple.
1236
00:49:33,320 –> 00:49:36,200
Slow organizations rarely look slow from the inside.
1237
00:49:36,200 –> 00:49:39,240
In fact they usually look incredibly active and responsive.
1238
00:49:39,240 –> 00:49:42,360
They look like groups of people who are deeply engaged, careful
1239
00:49:42,360 –> 00:49:44,280
and constantly coordinating every move.
1240
00:49:44,280 –> 00:49:46,440
But if every meaningful decision has to pass
1241
00:49:46,440 –> 00:49:49,160
through extra interpretation and social repair
1242
00:49:49,160 –> 00:49:51,320
then the organization is burning time in places
1243
00:49:51,320 –> 00:49:53,720
that leadership simply does not measure well.
1244
00:49:53,720 –> 00:49:55,720
This represents one of the biggest blind spots
1245
00:49:55,720 –> 00:49:57,400
in enterprise performance today.
1246
00:49:57,400 –> 00:50:00,840
Labor is easy to count, technology spend is easy to track
1247
00:50:00,840 –> 00:50:02,760
and program budgets are simple to audit
1248
00:50:02,760 –> 00:50:05,320
but the cost of delayed understanding is much harder to see.
1249
00:50:05,320 –> 00:50:07,640
In many environments this latency is actually
1250
00:50:07,640 –> 00:50:09,960
the most expensive thing in the entire business.
1251
00:50:09,960 –> 00:50:13,480
When decisions slow down your optionality begins to shrink.
1252
00:50:13,480 –> 00:50:15,960
A response that arrives too late isn’t just neutral
1253
00:50:15,960 –> 00:50:17,640
it’s a missed opportunity.
1254
00:50:17,640 –> 00:50:19,640
A launch decision that takes too long can close
1255
00:50:19,640 –> 00:50:22,520
a market window entirely just as an approval waiting
1256
00:50:22,520 –> 00:50:24,600
for one more clarification reduces your room
1257
00:50:24,600 –> 00:50:25,960
to adapt later on.
1258
00:50:25,960 –> 00:50:28,360
A commercial team working from stale information is not
1259
00:50:28,360 –> 00:50:31,000
just slower than the competition they are strategically weaker.
1260
00:50:31,000 –> 00:50:32,600
That is the compounding effect at work.
1261
00:50:32,600 –> 00:50:35,000
Decision latency isn’t only about wasted minutes.
1262
00:50:35,000 –> 00:50:37,640
It’s about degraded timing and degraded timing
1263
00:50:37,640 –> 00:50:39,720
fundamentally changes business outcomes.
1264
00:50:39,720 –> 00:50:42,440
Now if you map that back to the organization we just discussed
1265
00:50:42,440 –> 00:50:44,280
you can see the system outcomes clearly.
1266
00:50:44,280 –> 00:50:46,360
Team pressure creates a need for more checking
1267
00:50:46,360 –> 00:50:48,600
while content fragmentation creates a need for more
1268
00:50:48,600 –> 00:50:49,560
interpretation.
1269
00:50:49,560 –> 00:50:52,040
When you add permission drift into the mix it creates a heavy
1270
00:50:52,040 –> 00:50:54,840
dependency on specific people and all three of those conditions
1271
00:50:54,840 –> 00:50:57,480
extend the time between a signal and an action.
1272
00:50:57,480 –> 00:50:59,400
Latency is not a separate problem.
1273
00:50:59,400 –> 00:51:01,880
It is the business expression of the structural problems
1274
00:51:01,880 –> 00:51:03,240
we’ve already been talking about.
1275
00:51:03,240 –> 00:51:06,200
I believe leaders underestimate this because they experience
1276
00:51:06,200 –> 00:51:08,200
the symptoms as isolated incidents.
1277
00:51:08,200 –> 00:51:10,280
They see too many meetings too much follow up
1278
00:51:10,280 –> 00:51:12,440
or too many versions of the same document
1279
00:51:12,440 –> 00:51:15,800
but they don’t always connect those symptoms to one underlying cost curve.
1280
00:51:15,800 –> 00:51:17,160
The business isn’t just busy.
1281
00:51:17,160 –> 00:51:20,040
It is actively delaying itself every single hour.
1282
00:51:20,040 –> 00:51:22,360
Over time this environment shapes the culture.
1283
00:51:22,360 –> 00:51:25,320
People become cautious because moving fast feels unsafe
1284
00:51:25,320 –> 00:51:27,240
so they stop acting on shared environments
1285
00:51:27,240 –> 00:51:29,880
and start acting only after they get personal confirmation.
1286
00:51:29,880 –> 00:51:32,200
They escalate issues earlier and protect themselves
1287
00:51:32,200 –> 00:51:33,800
with more stakeholders and more notes
1288
00:51:33,800 –> 00:51:35,480
which feels like responsible behavior.
1289
00:51:35,480 –> 00:51:38,680
Structurally however this only increases latency further.
1290
00:51:38,680 –> 00:51:40,760
The organization effectively teaches itself
1291
00:51:40,760 –> 00:51:42,600
that friction is a sign of professionalism
1292
00:51:42,600 –> 00:51:44,200
and that is a dangerous lesson to learn.
1293
00:51:44,200 –> 00:51:46,200
Once delay is normalized as diligence
1294
00:51:46,200 –> 00:51:48,360
the system starts protecting the very behaviors
1295
00:51:48,360 –> 00:51:50,120
that are slowing it down in the first place.
1296
00:51:50,120 –> 00:51:52,280
This is where executive attention becomes critical.
1297
00:51:52,280 –> 00:51:54,760
If leaders only ask whether the work is getting done
1298
00:51:54,760 –> 00:51:58,360
they miss the massive amount of drag the system creates while doing it.
1299
00:51:58,360 –> 00:52:01,640
But if they ask a harder question like how long it takes the organization
1300
00:52:01,640 –> 00:52:03,720
to turn an event into a trusted action
1301
00:52:03,720 –> 00:52:05,560
they start seeing the business differently.
1302
00:52:05,560 –> 00:52:07,800
They stop seeing functions and reporting lines
1303
00:52:07,800 –> 00:52:09,320
and start seeing decision flow
1304
00:52:09,320 –> 00:52:11,880
that is the real performance layer of any company.
1305
00:52:11,880 –> 00:52:14,280
The most expensive part of many enterprises
1306
00:52:14,280 –> 00:52:15,560
is not the effort itself
1307
00:52:15,560 –> 00:52:17,720
but the compound cost of waiting and aligning
1308
00:52:17,720 –> 00:52:19,800
before anyone feels safe enough to move.
1309
00:52:19,800 –> 00:52:22,600
Once you see that the next pattern becomes impossible to ignore
1310
00:52:22,600 –> 00:52:25,720
because latency almost always leaves the second signal behind.
1311
00:52:25,720 –> 00:52:26,440
Re-work.
1312
00:52:26,440 –> 00:52:29,160
Re-work is a structural signal not a quality issue.
1313
00:52:29,160 –> 00:52:31,000
Once rework starts showing up everywhere
1314
00:52:31,000 –> 00:52:33,560
leaders usually try to explain it using the wrong language.
1315
00:52:33,560 –> 00:52:35,800
They call it inconsistency or quality drift
1316
00:52:35,800 –> 00:52:38,040
and sometimes they even blame it on weak execution
1317
00:52:38,040 –> 00:52:39,400
or a lack of accountability.
1318
00:52:39,400 –> 00:52:42,120
But a lot of rework in large organizations
1319
00:52:42,120 –> 00:52:44,040
is not a quality issue first.
1320
00:52:44,040 –> 00:52:45,960
It is a structural signal.
1321
00:52:45,960 –> 00:52:49,160
It tells you that the organization does not hold shared context
1322
00:52:49,160 –> 00:52:51,640
strongly enough for work to move forward once
1323
00:52:51,640 –> 00:52:53,640
so the work moves forward twice or three times.
1324
00:52:53,640 –> 00:52:55,400
You see it in the obvious places first
1325
00:52:55,400 –> 00:52:58,440
like multiple decks created for the same leadership conversation
1326
00:52:58,440 –> 00:53:01,640
or the same numbers being validated by three different teams.
1327
00:53:01,640 –> 00:53:03,720
Re-quests get re-entered into different systems
1328
00:53:03,720 –> 00:53:05,000
and approvals are repeated
1329
00:53:05,000 –> 00:53:07,240
because the previous version was almost right
1330
00:53:07,240 –> 00:53:09,240
but not quite trusted enough to act on.
1331
00:53:09,240 –> 00:53:11,480
Analysis is often rebuilt by another function
1332
00:53:11,480 –> 00:53:14,520
because they need it in their own format with their own assumptions.
1333
00:53:14,520 –> 00:53:16,440
From the outside this looks like thoroughness
1334
00:53:16,440 –> 00:53:19,960
but inside the system it is usually structural compensation.
1335
00:53:19,960 –> 00:53:23,000
When ownership is blurred and the source of truth is unstable
1336
00:53:23,000 –> 00:53:25,640
rework becomes a primary form of risk management.
1337
00:53:25,640 –> 00:53:28,200
People do not redo work because they enjoy redundancy.
1338
00:53:28,200 –> 00:53:30,280
They redo it because the environment does not give them
1339
00:53:30,280 –> 00:53:33,080
enough confidence to act on what already exists.
1340
00:53:33,080 –> 00:53:35,080
This is the key shift in perspective.
1341
00:53:35,080 –> 00:53:37,640
Re-work is often the cost of low trust.
1342
00:53:37,640 –> 00:53:40,200
That might be low trust in the data, the handoff
1343
00:53:40,200 –> 00:53:42,360
or the previous team’s interpretation of the goals.
1344
00:53:42,360 –> 00:53:44,440
So each function adds another layer of review
1345
00:53:44,440 –> 00:53:46,200
or another local validation step
1346
00:53:46,200 –> 00:53:48,440
and every added layer feels completely justified
1347
00:53:48,440 –> 00:53:50,440
from where that specific team sits.
1348
00:53:50,440 –> 00:53:52,840
That is why rework is so persistent.
1349
00:53:52,840 –> 00:53:55,640
It is locally rational but globally expensive.
1350
00:53:55,640 –> 00:53:58,040
I’ve seen organizations where the same strategic narrative
1351
00:53:58,040 –> 00:54:00,360
is rebuilt in marketing sales and operations
1352
00:54:00,360 –> 00:54:02,280
before it ever reaches the executive team.
1353
00:54:02,280 –> 00:54:04,440
This doesn’t happen because the people are careless
1354
00:54:04,440 –> 00:54:06,920
but because no one believes one shared version
1355
00:54:06,920 –> 00:54:10,120
can survive the process with enough clarity to be reused safely.
1356
00:54:10,120 –> 00:54:11,720
That is not a storytelling problem.
1357
00:54:11,720 –> 00:54:13,160
It is an infrastructure problem.
1358
00:54:13,160 –> 00:54:14,840
The organization cannot preserve meaning
1359
00:54:14,840 –> 00:54:15,880
across its own boundaries.
1360
00:54:15,880 –> 00:54:19,000
So meaning has to be regenerated over and over again.
1361
00:54:19,000 –> 00:54:22,040
This matters because most transformation programs
1362
00:54:22,040 –> 00:54:23,720
don’t measure this well at all.
1363
00:54:23,720 –> 00:54:25,880
They measure outputs like milestones completed
1364
00:54:25,880 –> 00:54:27,320
or workflows launched
1365
00:54:27,320 –> 00:54:30,120
but they rarely measure how much duplicated effort
1366
00:54:30,120 –> 00:54:31,960
was required underneath those outputs
1367
00:54:31,960 –> 00:54:33,560
just to make them possible.
1368
00:54:33,560 –> 00:54:35,640
The program looks productive on paper
1369
00:54:35,640 –> 00:54:38,200
while the operating environment keeps consuming energy
1370
00:54:38,200 –> 00:54:39,560
through constant repetition.
1371
00:54:39,560 –> 00:54:41,480
This is exactly why rework survives
1372
00:54:41,480 –> 00:54:42,920
so many transformation efforts.
1373
00:54:42,920 –> 00:54:45,080
The visible layer of the business improves
1374
00:54:45,080 –> 00:54:47,800
but the hidden friction layer stays perfectly intact.
1375
00:54:47,800 –> 00:54:50,600
Once people learn that repetition is the safest way to operate
1376
00:54:50,600 –> 00:54:52,440
the behavior becomes part of the culture.
1377
00:54:52,440 –> 00:54:54,840
Teams start protecting themselves with extra checkpoints
1378
00:54:54,840 –> 00:54:57,480
and managers ask for one more pass before a release.
1379
00:54:57,480 –> 00:55:00,280
Functions will even maintain private trackers
1380
00:55:00,280 –> 00:55:02,360
even when a central system exists.
1381
00:55:02,360 –> 00:55:04,200
Making everyone a little more cautious
1382
00:55:04,200 –> 00:55:06,760
and a little less willing to trust shared outputs.
1383
00:55:06,760 –> 00:55:08,680
That is how rework becomes normalized
1384
00:55:08,680 –> 00:55:11,480
as a sign of professionalism and good governance.
1385
00:55:11,480 –> 00:55:13,240
But what’s actually happening is
1386
00:55:13,240 –> 00:55:14,760
the organization is teaching people
1387
00:55:14,760 –> 00:55:16,600
that first pass work is never enough.
1388
00:55:16,600 –> 00:55:18,040
It’s not because the people are weak
1389
00:55:18,040 –> 00:55:19,720
but because the surrounding structure
1390
00:55:19,720 –> 00:55:22,200
does not reliably carry confidence forward
1391
00:55:22,200 –> 00:55:23,160
through the workflow.
1392
00:55:23,160 –> 00:55:25,720
Every team adds its own structural compensation
1393
00:55:25,720 –> 00:55:28,920
and those compensations eventually stack on top of each other.
1394
00:55:28,920 –> 00:55:31,720
That creates slower delivery and lower clarity
1395
00:55:31,720 –> 00:55:34,760
even while the organization appears careful and mature.
1396
00:55:34,760 –> 00:55:36,440
This is why I would never dismiss rework
1397
00:55:36,440 –> 00:55:37,720
as just a quality issue.
1398
00:55:37,720 –> 00:55:40,440
Quality language makes it sound like a failure at the team level
1399
00:55:40,440 –> 00:55:43,400
but a systems view asks a different question entirely.
1400
00:55:43,400 –> 00:55:45,960
It asks what conditions are producing the need to redo
1401
00:55:45,960 –> 00:55:48,280
or revalidate this work downstream.
1402
00:55:48,280 –> 00:55:50,280
If the answer is unstable ownership
1403
00:55:50,280 –> 00:55:51,240
and fragmented knowledge,
1404
00:55:51,240 –> 00:55:53,560
then no amount of pressure on individuals will ever solve it.
1405
00:55:53,560 –> 00:55:55,000
You have to change the environment
1406
00:55:55,000 –> 00:55:57,720
that keeps making repetition feel safer than reuse.
1407
00:55:57,720 –> 00:55:59,800
Once you see rework through that lens,
1408
00:55:59,800 –> 00:56:01,960
another pattern becomes much easier to understand.
1409
00:56:01,960 –> 00:56:04,280
You start to see why so much important work
1410
00:56:04,280 –> 00:56:06,280
escapes the official process entirely
1411
00:56:06,280 –> 00:56:09,080
and starts living inside files and personal trackers.
1412
00:56:09,080 –> 00:56:12,040
And shadow systems are the real process map.
1413
00:56:12,040 –> 00:56:14,520
That brings us to the reality of shadow systems.
1414
00:56:14,520 –> 00:56:18,040
Once official workflows stop matching how work actually gets done,
1415
00:56:18,040 –> 00:56:21,000
people don’t sit around waiting for the governance model to catch up.
1416
00:56:21,000 –> 00:56:21,960
They root around it.
1417
00:56:21,960 –> 00:56:25,160
This is one of the most reliable behaviors you will see in any organization
1418
00:56:25,160 –> 00:56:28,520
because if the formal path is too slow, unclear or risky,
1419
00:56:28,520 –> 00:56:31,640
people will build a parallel path to get their jobs done.
1420
00:56:31,640 –> 00:56:33,960
Usually these workarounds appear quietly
1421
00:56:33,960 –> 00:56:36,040
and pragmatically for very good reasons.
1422
00:56:36,040 –> 00:56:38,680
A private spreadsheet pops up to track project status
1423
00:56:38,680 –> 00:56:40,920
because the official system doesn’t show enough context
1424
00:56:40,920 –> 00:56:43,240
or a personal one note becomes the real decision log
1425
00:56:43,240 –> 00:56:45,640
because nobody trusts the formal meeting notes.
1426
00:56:45,640 –> 00:56:48,360
You might see a side team’s chat become the actual approval lane
1427
00:56:48,360 –> 00:56:50,360
because the documented process takes too long
1428
00:56:50,360 –> 00:56:52,840
or someone builds a small power automate flow
1429
00:56:52,840 –> 00:56:56,120
for their department because waiting for an enterprise wide workflow
1430
00:56:56,120 –> 00:56:57,560
would kill their momentum.
1431
00:56:57,560 –> 00:56:59,080
This is how shadow systems grow
1432
00:56:59,080 –> 00:57:01,240
and they don’t start as an act of rebellion.
1433
00:57:01,240 –> 00:57:02,920
They start as an adaptation.
1434
00:57:02,920 –> 00:57:05,560
This distinction matters because leaders often talk
1435
00:57:05,560 –> 00:57:07,960
about shadow IT or shadow AI
1436
00:57:07,960 –> 00:57:10,040
as if these are acts of non-compliance
1437
00:57:10,040 –> 00:57:12,040
that need to be corrected through more control.
1438
00:57:12,040 –> 00:57:13,800
While control is sometimes necessary,
1439
00:57:13,800 –> 00:57:16,600
if you look closely, shadow behavior is usually diagnostic
1440
00:57:16,600 –> 00:57:17,720
of a deeper structural issue.
1441
00:57:17,720 –> 00:57:19,960
It tells you the formal environment is not carrying
1442
00:57:19,960 –> 00:57:22,280
the operational load people needed to carry.
1443
00:57:22,280 –> 00:57:24,520
The people inside the system are doing exactly
1444
00:57:24,520 –> 00:57:26,760
what high performing individuals always do
1445
00:57:26,760 –> 00:57:29,320
by protecting throughput and preserving clarity.
1446
00:57:29,320 –> 00:57:31,480
They are reducing uncertainty locally
1447
00:57:31,480 –> 00:57:33,880
when the broader structure cannot do it reliably
1448
00:57:33,880 –> 00:57:36,280
which means from a system perspective, shadow systems
1449
00:57:36,280 –> 00:57:37,720
are not just noise at the edge.
1450
00:57:37,720 –> 00:57:39,000
They are the real process map.
1451
00:57:39,000 –> 00:57:41,720
These workarounds show exactly where the documented process
1452
00:57:41,720 –> 00:57:43,800
stopped being useful and where actual execution
1453
00:57:43,800 –> 00:57:45,320
had to invent a substitute.
1454
00:57:45,320 –> 00:57:47,080
That substitute might be messy, risky,
1455
00:57:47,080 –> 00:57:48,760
or create data fragmentation.
1456
00:57:48,760 –> 00:57:51,640
But the reason it exists is the most important part of the story.
1457
00:57:51,640 –> 00:57:53,800
It exists because the organization had a gap
1458
00:57:53,800 –> 00:57:56,680
between the prescribed flow and the executable flow
1459
00:57:56,680 –> 00:57:58,520
and people filled that gap manually.
1460
00:57:58,520 –> 00:58:00,680
Once you start reading shadow systems this way,
1461
00:58:00,680 –> 00:58:03,000
they become incredibly revealing for any leader.
1462
00:58:03,000 –> 00:58:06,360
Every private tracker tells you the official tracker was insufficient
1463
00:58:06,360 –> 00:58:08,040
and every local spreadsheet tells you
1464
00:58:08,040 –> 00:58:10,040
the shared system lacked the trust, speed,
1465
00:58:10,040 –> 00:58:11,800
or usability required to function.
1466
00:58:11,800 –> 00:58:14,920
Every side conversation that becomes operationally critical
1467
00:58:14,920 –> 00:58:16,840
tells you the main collaboration layer
1468
00:58:16,840 –> 00:58:19,240
failed to hold enough clarity for the team.
1469
00:58:19,240 –> 00:58:22,280
This is valuable information because you cannot eliminate shadow behavior
1470
00:58:22,280 –> 00:58:24,760
sustainably without fixing the conditions that produce it.
1471
00:58:24,760 –> 00:58:27,720
If you ban the spreadsheet, people will just create another one
1472
00:58:27,720 –> 00:58:29,640
and if you close one private work around,
1473
00:58:29,640 –> 00:58:31,560
the work will simply escape somewhere else.
1474
00:58:31,560 –> 00:58:34,520
Demand does not disappear just because governance wins the argument
1475
00:58:34,520 –> 00:58:37,000
and the need that created the work around is still there.
1476
00:58:37,000 –> 00:58:39,720
This is the same mistake many transformation programs make
1477
00:58:39,720 –> 00:58:41,720
when they see the shadow layer and try to remove it
1478
00:58:41,720 –> 00:58:43,480
before understanding why it exists.
1479
00:58:43,480 –> 00:58:46,520
The shadow layer is often where the organization is telling the truth
1480
00:58:46,520 –> 00:58:48,200
about its daily operations.
1481
00:58:48,200 –> 00:58:50,680
While the documented process says this is how work moves,
1482
00:58:50,680 –> 00:58:53,480
the shadow layer says this is how work actually survives
1483
00:58:53,480 –> 00:58:54,840
and that difference is everything.
1484
00:58:54,840 –> 00:58:57,560
I’ve seen organizations with beautifully documented workflows
1485
00:58:57,560 –> 00:58:59,480
that looked complete in a PowerPoint deck
1486
00:58:59,480 –> 00:59:02,280
but functioned completely differently in reality.
1487
00:59:02,280 –> 00:59:05,080
The real movement happened in side notes, trusted chats
1488
00:59:05,080 –> 00:59:08,440
and personal escalation parts that never appeared in the official diagram.
1489
00:59:08,440 –> 00:59:11,000
So when leaders ask why people don’t follow the process,
1490
00:59:11,000 –> 00:59:13,640
the better question is what the process is failing to provide.
1491
00:59:13,640 –> 00:59:16,360
Does it lack clarity, speed, context or trust?
1492
00:59:16,360 –> 00:59:19,000
If the system cannot provide those things at the point of work,
1493
00:59:19,000 –> 00:59:21,320
people will build structural compensation around it
1494
00:59:21,320 –> 00:59:23,800
until that compensation becomes the actual operating model.
1495
00:59:23,800 –> 00:59:26,600
This is also why shadow AI is rising so fast today.
1496
00:59:26,600 –> 00:59:29,320
If the approved environment cannot answer quickly enough
1497
00:59:29,320 –> 00:59:32,760
or structure knowledge clearly, people will reach for external intelligence
1498
00:59:32,760 –> 00:59:34,600
because the work still has to move.
1499
00:59:34,600 –> 00:59:37,480
The shadow layer keeps expanding wherever formal design
1500
00:59:37,480 –> 00:59:39,400
and operational need diverge.
1501
00:59:39,400 –> 00:59:41,320
If you want the real map of your organization,
1502
00:59:41,320 –> 00:59:43,160
don’t just inspect the approved workflow.
1503
00:59:43,160 –> 00:59:44,920
Inspect what people built next to it
1504
00:59:44,920 –> 00:59:46,680
because that is where execution is telling you
1505
00:59:46,680 –> 00:59:48,840
what the formal system could not carry.
1506
00:59:48,840 –> 00:59:52,120
Why so many transformations fail even with good technology?
1507
00:59:52,120 –> 00:59:55,000
This is exactly why so many transformation programs disappoint
1508
00:59:55,000 –> 00:59:57,720
even when the technology itself is high quality.
1509
00:59:57,720 –> 00:59:59,400
The tools are not usually the main problem,
1510
00:59:59,400 –> 01:00:02,280
but the problem is that organizations keep trying to modernize
1511
01:00:02,280 –> 01:00:05,480
the visible layer while leaving the hidden operating model untouched.
1512
01:00:05,480 –> 01:00:09,000
They automate broken workflows and digitize ambiguous ownership.
1513
01:00:09,000 –> 01:00:11,720
Then they’re surprised when the new platform produces cleaner screens
1514
01:00:11,720 –> 01:00:13,320
but not cleaner execution.
1515
01:00:13,320 –> 01:00:16,360
That pattern shows up again and again in large companies.
1516
01:00:16,360 –> 01:00:19,320
A company rolls out a new platform, the migration succeeds
1517
01:00:19,320 –> 01:00:21,480
and the dashboards look promising to leadership.
1518
01:00:21,480 –> 01:00:23,560
But the daily experience of work barely changes
1519
01:00:23,560 –> 01:00:27,000
because people are still chasing context, duplicating information
1520
01:00:27,000 –> 01:00:29,480
and relying on informal approvals to get anything done.
1521
01:00:29,480 –> 01:00:33,640
The technology lands, but the operating drag remains exactly where it was before.
1522
01:00:33,640 –> 01:00:36,360
The reason for this is that large programs usually start
1523
01:00:36,360 –> 01:00:39,480
from the documented organization rather than the behavioral one.
1524
01:00:39,480 –> 01:00:41,160
They assume the process map is true
1525
01:00:41,160 –> 01:00:43,800
and that the formal workflow is the actual workflow.
1526
01:00:43,800 –> 01:00:47,000
But if the real organization is running on hidden dependencies
1527
01:00:47,000 –> 01:00:49,800
and shadow systems, then the transformation is being layered
1528
01:00:49,800 –> 01:00:51,160
onto a false map.
1529
01:00:51,160 –> 01:00:54,440
From a system perspective, that is not just inefficient, it is fragile.
1530
01:00:54,440 –> 01:00:57,960
You are investing in technical change without first understanding the environment
1531
01:00:57,960 –> 01:00:59,240
the change has to pass through.
1532
01:00:59,240 –> 01:01:03,400
We don’t need to dramatize this because there are enough examples of ERP programs
1533
01:01:03,400 –> 01:01:05,720
that disrupted operations or platform rollouts
1534
01:01:05,720 –> 01:01:08,680
that actually increased the process burden on employees.
1535
01:01:08,680 –> 01:01:11,160
The same structural lesson shows up every time.
1536
01:01:11,160 –> 01:01:14,680
Good technology cannot compensate for weak organizational design.
1537
01:01:14,680 –> 01:01:19,000
Technology is precise and it forces assumptions into workflows and data structures.
1538
01:01:19,000 –> 01:01:23,480
If those assumptions are wrong, the system will simply scale the wrong thing very efficiently
1539
01:01:23,480 –> 01:01:28,200
which is why I’m skeptical whenever a transformation story starts with features instead of flow.
1540
01:01:28,200 –> 01:01:30,360
When leaders say they’ve implemented a new platform,
1541
01:01:30,360 –> 01:01:33,160
my next question is always about what decision became easier
1542
01:01:33,160 –> 01:01:35,000
or what dependency disappeared.
1543
01:01:35,000 –> 01:01:37,480
Implementation is not the same as operational improvement
1544
01:01:37,480 –> 01:01:40,280
yet a lot of programs confuse the tool by measuring deployment
1545
01:01:40,280 –> 01:01:42,680
and training completion instead of structural health.
1546
01:01:42,680 –> 01:01:45,080
The metric that actually matters is whether the organization
1547
01:01:45,080 –> 01:01:47,000
now requires less compensation to function.
1548
01:01:47,000 –> 01:01:49,560
We should be looking for less rework, less hidden ownership
1549
01:01:49,560 –> 01:01:51,160
and lower decision latency.
1550
01:01:51,160 –> 01:01:55,080
If those things are not improving, the transformation may be technically successful
1551
01:01:55,080 –> 01:01:57,720
while remaining structurally ineffective at the same time.
1552
01:01:57,720 –> 01:02:00,520
That sounds harsh but it’s common because most transformation efforts
1553
01:02:00,520 –> 01:02:02,920
still treat organizations like static diagrams.
1554
01:02:02,920 –> 01:02:05,720
Execution happens in relationships and trust patterns
1555
01:02:05,720 –> 01:02:07,800
and when a program ignores those realities,
1556
01:02:07,800 –> 01:02:09,560
the people have to absorb the mismatch.
1557
01:02:09,560 –> 01:02:13,320
They become the manual translation layer between old behavior and new technology
1558
01:02:13,320 –> 01:02:14,920
just to keep the project looking alive.
1559
01:02:14,920 –> 01:02:18,360
This is also why change resistance is often misread by management.
1560
01:02:18,360 –> 01:02:21,800
Sometimes people are not resisting the future but they are protecting themselves
1561
01:02:21,800 –> 01:02:25,160
from a new system that still doesn’t match how work actually moves.
1562
01:02:25,160 –> 01:02:27,560
If the transformation just digitizes confusion,
1563
01:02:27,560 –> 01:02:30,840
people experience that as structured friction rather than progress.
1564
01:02:30,840 –> 01:02:33,000
Leadership then concludes the problem is adoption
1565
01:02:33,000 –> 01:02:35,480
and calls for more training or executive sponsorship.
1566
01:02:35,480 –> 01:02:37,880
While those might be useful if the structure is still wrong,
1567
01:02:37,880 –> 01:02:40,840
those interventions just push harder on the same design flow.
1568
01:02:40,840 –> 01:02:43,160
The real lesson is that transformation fails
1569
01:02:43,160 –> 01:02:46,040
because the behavioral model of the organization was ignored.
1570
01:02:46,040 –> 01:02:49,720
The former model gets modernized while the actual way people work is forgotten
1571
01:02:49,720 –> 01:02:52,120
and the gap between the two is where value leaks out.
1572
01:02:52,120 –> 01:02:54,520
This is why the next wave of AI matters so much.
1573
01:02:54,520 –> 01:02:58,120
AI will not operate on the organization you describe in your strategy decks
1574
01:02:58,120 –> 01:03:01,320
but it will operate on the one your data and behaviors have actually created.
1575
01:03:01,320 –> 01:03:05,240
AI does not operate on the organization you describe
1576
01:03:05,240 –> 01:03:07,400
and this is where AI becomes very clarifying
1577
01:03:07,400 –> 01:03:11,640
because it does not operate on the organization you describe in your slide decks.
1578
01:03:11,640 –> 01:03:14,760
It operates on the organization your environment has actually produced
1579
01:03:14,760 –> 01:03:18,840
and that distinction is about to matter a lot more than most leadership teams expect.
1580
01:03:18,840 –> 01:03:20,680
When executives talk about AI readiness,
1581
01:03:20,680 –> 01:03:23,560
they often describe intent by listing of their clear governance,
1582
01:03:23,560 –> 01:03:25,880
their collaboration models and their structured knowledge.
1583
01:03:25,880 –> 01:03:28,040
They talk about role clarity and approved systems
1584
01:03:28,040 –> 01:03:30,440
as if those things are already fully realized.
1585
01:03:30,440 –> 01:03:32,440
That may all be directionally true
1586
01:03:32,440 –> 01:03:37,080
but co-pilot agents and retrieval-based AI do not reason over what is directionally true.
1587
01:03:37,080 –> 01:03:39,640
They reason over what is actually accessible,
1588
01:03:39,640 –> 01:03:42,840
what is labeled and what is currently sitting in your data stores.
1589
01:03:42,840 –> 01:03:45,240
AI does not meet your strategy deck first.
1590
01:03:45,240 –> 01:03:47,320
Instead it meets your operating residue
1591
01:03:47,320 –> 01:03:49,160
and that is where the real issue begins.
1592
01:03:49,160 –> 01:03:53,080
If your SharePoint environment contains five different versions of the same narrative
1593
01:03:53,080 –> 01:03:56,200
the AI has no way of knowing which one reflects executive intent
1594
01:03:56,200 –> 01:03:58,840
unless the surrounding structure makes that clear.
1595
01:03:58,840 –> 01:04:00,760
If permissions have drifted over time,
1596
01:04:00,760 –> 01:04:04,520
the AI simply inherits that reality rather than fixing it.
1597
01:04:04,520 –> 01:04:07,000
If sensitive information is broadly accessible
1598
01:04:07,000 –> 01:04:09,320
because your access design was never cleaned up,
1599
01:04:09,320 –> 01:04:13,080
the AI does not correct that structurally but rather respects the message fines.
1600
01:04:13,080 –> 01:04:15,480
When ownership is unclear or metadata is weak,
1601
01:04:15,480 –> 01:04:18,440
the AI cannot reconstruct the organization leaders meant to build
1602
01:04:18,440 –> 01:04:21,240
because it only knows how to work with the one that exists.
1603
01:04:21,240 –> 01:04:25,880
And why is that? The reason is that AI in Microsoft 365 is grounded in the Microsoft Graph
1604
01:04:25,880 –> 01:04:28,920
which means it relies on content stores, access boundaries
1605
01:04:28,920 –> 01:04:33,320
and the simple fact of what the environment can expose at the moment of interaction.
1606
01:04:33,320 –> 01:04:37,960
It is not sitting above the mess as some wise interpreter that understands your goals.
1607
01:04:37,960 –> 01:04:42,360
It is downstream of the mess which means every unresolved design weakness in your infrastructure
1608
01:04:42,360 –> 01:04:44,840
becomes a permanent part of the AI experience.
1609
01:04:44,840 –> 01:04:47,880
Messy SharePoint environments lead to unstable grounding
1610
01:04:47,880 –> 01:04:50,040
and permission drift leads to risky visibility
1611
01:04:50,040 –> 01:04:53,400
while conflicting files inevitably lead to uncertain answers.
1612
01:04:53,400 –> 01:04:55,160
When ownership of data is weak,
1613
01:04:55,160 –> 01:04:58,520
the result is a lack of trust in the outputs the AI provides.
1614
01:04:58,520 –> 01:04:59,800
Once those problems surface,
1615
01:04:59,800 –> 01:05:03,640
leaders often misread the situation and claim the AI is underperforming.
1616
01:05:03,640 –> 01:05:05,800
Sometimes that is true but very often,
1617
01:05:05,800 –> 01:05:08,040
the system is doing exactly what it was designed to do.
1618
01:05:08,040 –> 01:05:11,320
It’s just not designed for what leaders think they bought and that line matters
1619
01:05:11,320 –> 01:05:14,120
because disappointment with co-pilot is often just disappointment
1620
01:05:14,120 –> 01:05:17,320
with organizational structure surfacing through a new lens.
1621
01:05:17,320 –> 01:05:20,760
The model is not hallucinating your governance problem into existence.
1622
01:05:20,760 –> 01:05:23,560
It is simply encountering the one that was already there.
1623
01:05:23,560 –> 01:05:26,520
A user asks a simple question and the answer comes back vague
1624
01:05:26,520 –> 01:05:29,720
or unexpectedly exposed, which isn’t always an AI quality issue
1625
01:05:29,720 –> 01:05:31,560
but rather a knowledge architecture problem.
1626
01:05:31,560 –> 01:05:34,280
Now, map that back to the systems we’ve already discussed.
1627
01:05:34,280 –> 01:05:37,160
Teams pressure tells you where coordination is unstable
1628
01:05:37,160 –> 01:05:40,440
and content duplication shows you where knowledge is unreliable
1629
01:05:40,440 –> 01:05:43,000
while permissions reveal where actual control sits.
1630
01:05:43,000 –> 01:05:46,840
AI consumes the combined output of those conditions
1631
01:05:46,840 –> 01:05:49,640
so if the organization runs on coordinated fragmentation
1632
01:05:49,640 –> 01:05:52,360
the AI will not magically convert that into coherence.
1633
01:05:52,360 –> 01:05:55,000
It will actually amplify that fragmentation at machine speed
1634
01:05:55,000 –> 01:05:56,840
while using a much more convincing interface.
1635
01:05:56,840 –> 01:06:00,280
That is why some organizations feel underwhelmed by their early results.
1636
01:06:00,280 –> 01:06:02,040
Not because the technology lacks value
1637
01:06:02,040 –> 01:06:05,800
but because they are trying to scale intelligence on top of deep ambiguity.
1638
01:06:05,800 –> 01:06:08,840
From a system perspective, AI is not just a productivity layer
1639
01:06:08,840 –> 01:06:10,680
it is a structural exposure layer.
1640
01:06:10,680 –> 01:06:12,920
It reveals whether your environment has enough clarity,
1641
01:06:12,920 –> 01:06:17,400
trust and authority design to support machine assisted reasoning in the first place.
1642
01:06:17,400 –> 01:06:20,920
If those elements are present, the AI feels useful almost immediately
1643
01:06:20,920 –> 01:06:23,240
but if they are missing, the AI becomes a mirror.
1644
01:06:23,240 –> 01:06:24,920
It might be a very expensive mirror
1645
01:06:24,920 –> 01:06:26,920
but it still shows you exactly what is broken
1646
01:06:26,920 –> 01:06:29,960
from stale content and overshed files to disconnected folders
1647
01:06:29,960 –> 01:06:31,480
and invisible dependencies.
1648
01:06:31,480 –> 01:06:35,560
This moment is so important for leaders because AI is ending the era
1649
01:06:35,560 –> 01:06:39,960
where organizations could rely on people to manually compensate for structural flaws.
1650
01:06:39,960 –> 01:06:43,000
Humans are actually quite good at reading around a bad file structure
1651
01:06:43,000 –> 01:06:46,440
or remembering which person to trust, regardless of what the folder says.
1652
01:06:46,440 –> 01:06:49,240
We can patch over permission confusion with personal relationships
1653
01:06:49,240 –> 01:06:53,160
but AI cannot do that because it follows the environment exactly as it is built.
1654
01:06:53,160 –> 01:06:57,240
If leaders want better outcomes, the first question is not about which model they are using.
1655
01:06:57,240 –> 01:06:59,560
The real question is what kind of organization
1656
01:06:59,560 –> 01:07:03,400
their data access design and collaboration behavior have actually created over time?
1657
01:07:03,400 –> 01:07:05,480
Why co-pilot becomes a mirror?
1658
01:07:05,480 –> 01:07:06,520
Not a solution.
1659
01:07:06,520 –> 01:07:08,680
This brings us to the next mistake leaders make
1660
01:07:08,680 –> 01:07:13,320
which is buying co-pilot as if intelligence can compensate for structural weakness.
1661
01:07:13,320 –> 01:07:16,600
They act as if a better interface can fix a broken operating model
1662
01:07:16,600 –> 01:07:19,640
or as if retrieval can somehow replace the need for clear ownership
1663
01:07:19,640 –> 01:07:22,760
but co-pilot does not resolve those underlying conditions.
1664
01:07:22,760 –> 01:07:24,520
It reflects them back to the user.
1665
01:07:24,520 –> 01:07:28,040
That’s why in so many organizations co-pilot becomes a mirror
1666
01:07:28,040 –> 01:07:30,840
long before it ever becomes a multiplier for productivity.
1667
01:07:30,840 –> 01:07:34,600
You ask it to summarize a topic and suddenly you see how many contradictory documents
1668
01:07:34,600 –> 01:07:36,200
are floating around your system.
1669
01:07:36,200 –> 01:07:37,800
When you ask it to find the latest thinking,
1670
01:07:37,800 –> 01:07:41,240
you discover that latest depends entirely on which side or folder a person
1671
01:07:41,240 –> 01:07:42,600
happens to use last.
1672
01:07:42,600 –> 01:07:45,160
You ask it to help draft something sensitive
1673
01:07:45,160 –> 01:07:49,240
and suddenly access questions you ignore for years become very relevant very fast.
1674
01:07:49,240 –> 01:07:51,240
That is not a failure in the dramatic sense
1675
01:07:51,240 –> 01:07:55,560
but it is a form of exposure that shows you what your environment is capable of producing.
1676
01:07:55,560 –> 01:07:57,800
If the underlying environment is coherent,
1677
01:07:57,800 –> 01:08:01,400
the AI feels sharp and capable but if the environment is fragmented,
1678
01:08:01,400 –> 01:08:03,320
the tool feels unreliable.
1679
01:08:03,320 –> 01:08:05,560
This is not an AI problem first.
1680
01:08:05,560 –> 01:08:08,920
It is an operating model problem expressed through a digital assistant.
1681
01:08:08,920 –> 01:08:14,360
Once you see it this way, common adoption issues start making a lot more sense to the leadership team.
1682
01:08:14,360 –> 01:08:17,800
Users get vague results because the content base itself is vague
1683
01:08:17,800 –> 01:08:22,120
and answers feel inconsistent because the source material is full of contradictions.
1684
01:08:22,120 –> 01:08:24,120
The tool is not inventing these weaknesses
1685
01:08:24,120 –> 01:08:27,480
but it is surfacing them in a way that is finally impossible to ignore.
1686
01:08:27,480 –> 01:08:32,120
This becomes even more important when organizations move beyond a single assistant
1687
01:08:32,120 –> 01:08:35,560
and start building domain specific automations or functional agents.
1688
01:08:35,560 –> 01:08:37,480
If the enterprise is already fragmented,
1689
01:08:37,480 –> 01:08:41,880
these local AI solutions will often just optimize that fragmentation within their own silos.
1690
01:08:41,880 –> 01:08:45,320
Sales gets one layer and HR gets another while operations builds its own
1691
01:08:45,320 –> 01:08:47,480
and legal slows theirs down out of caution.
1692
01:08:47,480 –> 01:08:50,760
Each team tries to make the technology useful inside its own boundary
1693
01:08:50,760 –> 01:08:54,840
which is locally rational but structurally dangerous because it creates agents sprawl.
1694
01:08:54,840 –> 01:08:58,680
Now the business has not just siloed knowledge but siloed intelligence
1695
01:08:58,680 –> 01:09:01,960
and that is a pattern that prevents true organizational coherence.
1696
01:09:01,960 –> 01:09:04,360
Once intelligence fragments the same way data did,
1697
01:09:04,360 –> 01:09:09,400
the organization starts getting faster answers inside silos and much weaker results across them.
1698
01:09:09,400 –> 01:09:11,080
That feels like progress at first
1699
01:09:11,080 –> 01:09:15,880
but then the contradictions show up in the form of different assumptions and different versions of the truth.
1700
01:09:15,880 –> 01:09:20,600
Leaders often expect AI to be the thing that finally integrates the enterprise
1701
01:09:20,600 –> 01:09:24,600
but AI cannot integrate what the enterprise has not structurally aligned.
1702
01:09:24,600 –> 01:09:28,120
It can accelerate retrieval and reduce the effort it takes to draft a document
1703
01:09:28,120 –> 01:09:30,280
but it does not replace shared operating logic.
1704
01:09:30,280 –> 01:09:35,240
Without that logic, co-pilot becomes a very efficient way to encounter the mess you already had.
1705
01:09:35,240 –> 01:09:37,240
There is a useful executive lesson here.
1706
01:09:37,240 –> 01:09:39,400
If the rollout feels harder than expected,
1707
01:09:39,400 –> 01:09:42,120
don’t just ask if people need more prompting skills.
1708
01:09:42,120 –> 01:09:45,080
Ask what the friction is revealing about where your content is stale
1709
01:09:45,080 –> 01:09:46,520
or where your ownership is weak.
1710
01:09:46,520 –> 01:09:49,000
Those are no longer secondary cleanup questions.
1711
01:09:49,000 –> 01:09:51,480
They are now central to the actual value of the AI.
1712
01:09:51,480 –> 01:09:56,040
Adoption stalls when organizations try to scale intelligence without structural coherence
1713
01:09:56,040 –> 01:09:58,680
because people lose trust the moment they hit a contradiction.
1714
01:09:58,680 –> 01:10:01,880
Once that trust drops, usage becomes performative
1715
01:10:01,880 –> 01:10:04,200
where the licenses and the narrative exist
1716
01:10:04,200 –> 01:10:05,960
but the operating confidence is gone.
1717
01:10:05,960 –> 01:10:08,520
Co-pilot becomes a mirror not because that was the promise
1718
01:10:08,520 –> 01:10:10,760
but because that is the environment it entered.
1719
01:10:10,760 –> 01:10:13,720
To understand what leaders can actually do about this,
1720
01:10:13,720 –> 01:10:16,760
we have to look at how the shift actually starts.
1721
01:10:16,760 –> 01:10:18,600
It doesn’t start with a new org chart
1722
01:10:18,600 –> 01:10:21,160
but with tracing one real path through the system
1723
01:10:21,160 –> 01:10:22,920
to see where the structure is failing.
1724
01:10:22,920 –> 01:10:24,920
What changed in the case organization?
1725
01:10:24,920 –> 01:10:26,760
So what actually changed for them?
1726
01:10:26,760 –> 01:10:29,000
It wasn’t the org chart or the governance handbook
1727
01:10:29,000 –> 01:10:31,960
and they didn’t start with a massive new technology investment either.
1728
01:10:31,960 –> 01:10:34,360
Instead they began somewhere much less glamorous
1729
01:10:34,360 –> 01:10:36,840
but far more useful by picking one real decision path
1730
01:10:36,840 –> 01:10:38,680
and following it from start to finish.
1731
01:10:38,680 –> 01:10:41,160
That choice matters because when leaders try to diagnose
1732
01:10:41,160 –> 01:10:42,680
an entire organization at once,
1733
01:10:42,680 –> 01:10:44,440
they usually end up stuck in abstraction.
1734
01:10:44,440 –> 01:10:46,600
You get too many workshops, too many categories
1735
01:10:46,600 –> 01:10:48,040
and far too much corporate language
1736
01:10:48,040 –> 01:10:50,040
that doesn’t actually describe reality.
1737
01:10:50,040 –> 01:10:53,160
This team did something better by choosing a decision
1738
01:10:53,160 –> 01:10:55,560
that people recognized as important recurring
1739
01:10:55,560 –> 01:10:57,960
and consistently heavier than it should have been.
1740
01:10:57,960 –> 01:11:00,600
Then they mapped where that decision actually moved,
1741
01:11:00,600 –> 01:11:02,200
not where the policy said it moved
1742
01:11:02,200 –> 01:11:04,360
but where it really traveled through the system.
1743
01:11:04,360 –> 01:11:05,880
They looked at who got involved,
1744
01:11:05,880 –> 01:11:07,400
which team spaces were used
1745
01:11:07,400 –> 01:11:09,800
and exactly where files were created or copied.
1746
01:11:09,800 –> 01:11:11,480
They identified who paused the flow,
1747
01:11:11,480 –> 01:11:12,920
who unblocked it informally
1748
01:11:12,920 –> 01:11:15,080
and where people stopped trusting the shared environment
1749
01:11:15,080 –> 01:11:16,840
to shift into private coordination.
1750
01:11:16,840 –> 01:11:19,880
Once they did that, the organization became visible very quickly,
1751
01:11:19,880 –> 01:11:22,680
not in theory but in a clear sequence of actions
1752
01:11:22,680 –> 01:11:24,600
that changed the conversation immediately
1753
01:11:24,600 –> 01:11:26,200
because leadership could finally see
1754
01:11:26,200 –> 01:11:27,880
that what looked like one process
1755
01:11:27,880 –> 01:11:30,280
was actually a long chain of compensations.
1756
01:11:30,280 –> 01:11:32,280
A file would be created in one place,
1757
01:11:32,280 –> 01:11:34,440
copied to another, reworked in a third,
1758
01:11:34,440 –> 01:11:35,880
and then approved in a chat
1759
01:11:35,880 –> 01:11:38,280
before being stored somewhere that looked official
1760
01:11:38,280 –> 01:11:39,720
but wasn’t actually authoritative.
1761
01:11:39,720 –> 01:11:41,080
That is a different level of truth
1762
01:11:41,080 –> 01:11:42,680
and once that truth is visible,
1763
01:11:42,680 –> 01:11:44,440
blame starts losing its usefulness.
1764
01:11:44,440 –> 01:11:45,800
The people were not the problem here
1765
01:11:45,800 –> 01:11:48,360
but the structure was simply asking too much from them.
1766
01:11:48,360 –> 01:11:51,240
Because of that, the intervention became architectural
1767
01:11:51,240 –> 01:11:52,680
rather than motivational,
1768
01:11:52,680 –> 01:11:55,560
focusing on the system instead of trying to inspire the staff.
1769
01:11:55,560 –> 01:11:57,320
First, they reduced duplication
1770
01:11:57,320 –> 01:12:00,360
at the points where it was creating downstream uncertainty
1771
01:12:00,360 –> 01:12:02,200
but they didn’t do it by announcing
1772
01:12:02,200 –> 01:12:04,200
a stop-making copy’s policy.
1773
01:12:04,200 –> 01:12:05,880
That never works, so they clarified
1774
01:12:05,880 –> 01:12:08,360
which location was authoritative for which kind of work
1775
01:12:08,360 –> 01:12:10,120
and made that clarity operational
1776
01:12:10,120 –> 01:12:12,120
through visible owners and expectations.
1777
01:12:12,120 –> 01:12:13,800
That sounds basic and it is basic
1778
01:12:13,800 –> 01:12:15,720
but in fragmented environments,
1779
01:12:15,720 –> 01:12:18,520
simple clarity creates a disproportionate amount of relief.
1780
01:12:18,520 –> 01:12:21,160
Second, they simplified the collaboration patterns
1781
01:12:21,160 –> 01:12:22,760
around the decision itself.
1782
01:12:22,760 –> 01:12:24,360
By merging some team spaces
1783
01:12:24,360 –> 01:12:26,040
and retiring unnecessary channels,
1784
01:12:26,040 –> 01:12:28,680
they pulled some conversations back into shared spaces
1785
01:12:28,680 –> 01:12:29,480
where it made sense,
1786
01:12:29,480 –> 01:12:31,560
not because public is always better than private
1787
01:12:31,560 –> 01:12:35,000
but because too much work had slipped into hidden paths by default.
1788
01:12:35,000 –> 01:12:37,800
They weren’t trying to force transparency as an ideology
1789
01:12:37,800 –> 01:12:40,280
but were simply trying to reduce the number of places
1790
01:12:40,280 –> 01:12:42,200
where execution could disappear.
1791
01:12:42,200 –> 01:12:44,200
Third, they identified the hidden owners
1792
01:12:44,200 –> 01:12:47,160
and stopped pretending the formal owner model was enough.
1793
01:12:47,160 –> 01:12:48,920
This was one of the most important shifts
1794
01:12:48,920 –> 01:12:51,240
because once it became clear that certain people were acting
1795
01:12:51,240 –> 01:12:52,520
as dependency hubs.
1796
01:12:52,520 –> 01:12:55,160
Leadership had to choose between relying on heroics
1797
01:12:55,160 –> 01:12:56,760
or redesigning the system.
1798
01:12:56,760 –> 01:12:58,040
They chose to redesign,
1799
01:12:58,040 –> 01:12:59,720
so responsibilities were clarified
1800
01:12:59,720 –> 01:13:02,760
and access paths were cleaned up to redistribute context.
1801
01:13:02,760 –> 01:13:04,840
This ensured the organization didn’t keep depending
1802
01:13:04,840 –> 01:13:07,640
on the same small set of people to preserve continuity
1803
01:13:07,640 –> 01:13:09,720
which improved resilience immediately.
1804
01:13:09,720 –> 01:13:11,800
Every hidden owner is a single point of failure
1805
01:13:11,800 –> 01:13:12,840
waiting to matter,
1806
01:13:12,840 –> 01:13:14,600
so they started measuring the right things
1807
01:13:14,600 –> 01:13:17,160
like handoffs, delays, and version proliferation.
1808
01:13:17,160 –> 01:13:19,000
That changed the leadership lens from asking
1809
01:13:19,000 –> 01:13:20,360
if people were using the platform
1810
01:13:20,360 –> 01:13:23,640
to asking if the system required less compensation than before.
1811
01:13:23,640 –> 01:13:24,840
The results followed that shift
1812
01:13:24,840 –> 01:13:27,000
as decision latency dropped materially
1813
01:13:27,000 –> 01:13:28,040
and rework went down
1814
01:13:28,040 –> 01:13:30,600
because fewer parallel truths were circulating.
1815
01:13:30,600 –> 01:13:32,760
Ownership became easier to recognize
1816
01:13:32,760 –> 01:13:35,720
and people spent less time checking with the same few individuals
1817
01:13:35,720 –> 01:13:37,880
before they felt comfortable moving forward.
1818
01:13:37,880 –> 01:13:39,800
The organization did not become frictionless
1819
01:13:39,800 –> 01:13:42,680
which wasn’t the point anyway, but it did become much more legible.
1820
01:13:42,680 –> 01:13:45,000
Once a system becomes legible, it also becomes easier
1821
01:13:45,000 –> 01:13:47,160
to improve without exhausting the people inside it
1822
01:13:47,160 –> 01:13:49,400
and that is exactly what changed in this organization.
1823
01:13:49,400 –> 01:13:51,400
They stopped managing an imagined company
1824
01:13:51,400 –> 01:13:53,000
and started redesigning around the one
1825
01:13:53,000 –> 01:13:55,400
their own behavior had already revealed.
1826
01:13:55,400 –> 01:13:57,960
Step one, map one decision end to end.
1827
01:13:57,960 –> 01:13:59,960
If you want to do this in your own organization,
1828
01:13:59,960 –> 01:14:03,000
don’t start with a maturity assessment or a governance review.
1829
01:14:03,000 –> 01:14:04,760
Definitely don’t start by asking
1830
01:14:04,760 –> 01:14:07,400
10 different teams to describe how collaboration should work
1831
01:14:07,400 –> 01:14:09,480
but instead start with one real decision.
1832
01:14:09,480 –> 01:14:11,160
You need something that matters enough
1833
01:14:11,160 –> 01:14:12,680
to expose the structure around it
1834
01:14:12,680 –> 01:14:14,760
like a budget approval, a hiring decision
1835
01:14:14,760 –> 01:14:16,680
or a product launch sign off.
1836
01:14:16,680 –> 01:14:19,480
Anything with visible stakes and recurring friction will work
1837
01:14:19,480 –> 01:14:21,960
because one real decision contains almost everything
1838
01:14:21,960 –> 01:14:23,800
you need to see about your system.
1839
01:14:23,800 –> 01:14:26,040
It shows you where authority actually sits,
1840
01:14:26,040 –> 01:14:27,640
where knowledge gets recreated
1841
01:14:27,640 –> 01:14:30,360
and where people stop trusting the formal process
1842
01:14:30,360 –> 01:14:31,640
to start compensating.
1843
01:14:31,640 –> 01:14:33,880
This gives you a bounded way to inspect the business
1844
01:14:33,880 –> 01:14:35,320
without trying to boil the ocean
1845
01:14:35,320 –> 01:14:37,480
which is a trap leaders often fall into.
1846
01:14:37,480 –> 01:14:39,400
They ask how decisions work in general
1847
01:14:39,400 –> 01:14:42,760
but that question is far too broad to be useful for system design.
1848
01:14:42,760 –> 01:14:44,920
What you want instead is to take one decision
1849
01:14:44,920 –> 01:14:46,760
that everyone says should be straightforward
1850
01:14:46,760 –> 01:14:49,800
but somehow never is and trace it from the trigger to the outcome.
1851
01:14:49,800 –> 01:14:51,320
You need to know what started it,
1852
01:14:51,320 –> 01:14:52,600
who was supposed to be involved
1853
01:14:52,600 –> 01:14:54,200
and who actually ended up doing the work.
1854
01:14:54,200 –> 01:14:57,240
You have to find which tool held the first version
1855
01:14:57,240 –> 01:14:58,680
where the second version appeared
1856
01:14:58,680 –> 01:15:01,000
and exactly when someone left the shared space
1857
01:15:01,000 –> 01:15:03,480
to move into a private thread or a side call.
1858
01:15:03,480 –> 01:15:05,400
That is your real map, not a formal diagram
1859
01:15:05,400 –> 01:15:06,680
or an official workflow
1860
01:15:06,680 –> 01:15:09,720
but the actual path of movement through your infrastructure.
1861
01:15:09,720 –> 01:15:12,840
While you do this, you need to separate four things very clearly
1862
01:15:12,840 –> 01:15:14,280
so the structure doesn’t get flattened
1863
01:15:14,280 –> 01:15:15,960
into a generic list of stakeholders.
1864
01:15:15,960 –> 01:15:19,400
First, identify the formal approvers named in policy
1865
01:15:19,400 –> 01:15:21,400
and then find the practical influences
1866
01:15:21,400 –> 01:15:23,640
that everyone checks with before anything moves.
1867
01:15:23,640 –> 01:15:25,320
Third, look for the dependency hubs
1868
01:15:25,320 –> 01:15:27,400
who hold the context or history others need
1869
01:15:27,400 –> 01:15:29,400
and finally mark the delay points
1870
01:15:29,400 –> 01:15:31,320
where the process slows down or loops.
1871
01:15:31,320 –> 01:15:32,920
If you don’t separate those roles,
1872
01:15:32,920 –> 01:15:35,400
you’ll miss the reality that the formal approver
1873
01:15:35,400 –> 01:15:37,640
may not be the real decision maker at all.
1874
01:15:37,640 –> 01:15:39,240
The visible owner might not be the person
1875
01:15:39,240 –> 01:15:41,080
who can actually unblock the work
1876
01:15:41,080 –> 01:15:42,600
and the most important dependency
1877
01:15:42,600 –> 01:15:45,640
might sit three layers away from the formal chain.
1878
01:15:45,640 –> 01:15:48,440
Now map that to Microsoft 365 in a very practical way
1879
01:15:48,440 –> 01:15:50,200
by looking at where the decision begins
1880
01:15:50,200 –> 01:15:52,120
and where the working documents are edited.
1881
01:15:52,120 –> 01:15:53,880
You need to see which team’s chat carries
1882
01:15:53,880 –> 01:15:55,560
the real alignment conversation
1883
01:15:55,560 –> 01:15:57,080
and who gets tagged publicly
1884
01:15:57,080 –> 01:15:58,920
versus who gets contacted privately.
1885
01:15:58,920 –> 01:15:59,960
These details matter
1886
01:15:59,960 –> 01:16:01,560
because they convert leadership opinion
1887
01:16:01,560 –> 01:16:03,160
into observable system behavior
1888
01:16:03,160 –> 01:16:04,520
that you can actually measure.
1889
01:16:04,520 –> 01:16:05,880
Once you have that map,
1890
01:16:05,880 –> 01:16:07,560
don’t try to optimize it yet
1891
01:16:07,560 –> 01:16:09,240
but just look at what the path reveals
1892
01:16:09,240 –> 01:16:10,440
about your operating model.
1893
01:16:10,440 –> 01:16:13,000
Most organizations learn a lot before they change anything
1894
01:16:13,000 –> 01:16:14,920
because they realize the process is longer
1895
01:16:14,920 –> 01:16:17,560
and more people are involved than they ever thought.
1896
01:16:17,560 –> 01:16:20,280
They see that information gets restated constantly
1897
01:16:20,280 –> 01:16:22,920
and that the actual decision moves through trust and memory
1898
01:16:22,920 –> 01:16:24,120
rather than a straight line.
1899
01:16:24,120 –> 01:16:25,560
That insight alone is powerful
1900
01:16:25,560 –> 01:16:27,720
because the conversation changes from blaming people
1901
01:16:27,720 –> 01:16:28,680
for being complicated
1902
01:16:28,680 –> 01:16:30,360
to asking why the environment requires
1903
01:16:30,360 –> 01:16:31,560
so much translation work.
1904
01:16:31,560 –> 01:16:33,880
That is a much better executive question
1905
01:16:33,880 –> 01:16:35,640
and I recommend you stay disciplined
1906
01:16:35,640 –> 01:16:37,880
by doing this with only one decision at a time.
1907
01:16:37,880 –> 01:16:38,920
If you do it properly,
1908
01:16:38,920 –> 01:16:40,600
one decision gives you a complete slice
1909
01:16:40,600 –> 01:16:41,640
through the operating model
1910
01:16:41,640 –> 01:16:43,800
where you can see collaboration, pressure
1911
01:16:43,800 –> 01:16:45,080
and permission friction.
1912
01:16:45,080 –> 01:16:47,400
You will see the latency and the rework
1913
01:16:47,400 –> 01:16:49,640
which means one mapped decision is often enough
1914
01:16:49,640 –> 01:16:51,240
to reveal the system outcomes
1915
01:16:51,240 –> 01:16:53,240
you’ve been calling people problems.
1916
01:16:53,240 –> 01:16:55,160
Step one isn’t a workshop exercise
1917
01:16:55,160 –> 01:16:56,680
but an organizational x-ray
1918
01:16:56,680 –> 01:16:57,880
where you pick one decision
1919
01:16:57,880 –> 01:16:59,640
and trace it from end to end.
1920
01:16:59,640 –> 01:17:02,120
Don’t ask whether the process looks reasonable on paper
1921
01:17:02,120 –> 01:17:04,280
but ask whether the path people actually follow
1922
01:17:04,280 –> 01:17:05,880
is evidence of clarity or evidence
1923
01:17:05,880 –> 01:17:07,640
that the organization only survives
1924
01:17:07,640 –> 01:17:09,560
by compensating for itself.
1925
01:17:09,560 –> 01:17:12,920
Step two, trace data movement and version creation.
1926
01:17:12,920 –> 01:17:15,480
Once you’ve mapped out how a decision actually happens,
1927
01:17:15,480 –> 01:17:18,280
you need to trace the data that the decision relies on.
1928
01:17:18,280 –> 01:17:19,800
This is usually the part of the process
1929
01:17:19,800 –> 01:17:22,200
where things start to feel a little uncomfortable for leadership.
1930
01:17:22,200 –> 01:17:23,720
Most organizations claim they have
1931
01:17:23,720 –> 01:17:25,560
a formal decision making process
1932
01:17:25,560 –> 01:17:27,080
but if you look at the mechanics,
1933
01:17:27,080 –> 01:17:30,280
what they actually have is a content movement pattern.
1934
01:17:30,280 –> 01:17:32,840
The decision doesn’t just travel through a chain of people.
1935
01:17:32,840 –> 01:17:36,360
It migrates through a messy trail of files, drafts, slides and notes.
1936
01:17:36,360 –> 01:17:39,720
You’ll see it move through approvals, copies, exports and attachments,
1937
01:17:39,720 –> 01:17:42,520
sometimes even living in a grainy screenshot, sent over chat.
1938
01:17:42,520 –> 01:17:44,760
Every single one of these movements is a data point
1939
01:17:44,760 –> 01:17:46,040
that tells you something specific
1940
01:17:46,040 –> 01:17:47,800
about structural trust within the company.
1941
01:17:47,800 –> 01:17:50,280
Instead of just asking where a document is located,
1942
01:17:50,280 –> 01:17:52,760
you should ask where it started and where it was copied.
1943
01:17:52,760 –> 01:17:55,400
You need to find the exact moment people stop trusting
1944
01:17:55,400 –> 01:17:58,040
the previous version enough to keep working in the same place.
1945
01:17:58,040 –> 01:18:00,200
That is the real question you’re trying to answer.
1946
01:18:00,200 –> 01:18:02,440
If a file starts in a shared Teams library
1947
01:18:02,440 –> 01:18:04,120
but gets downloaded to a desktop,
1948
01:18:04,120 –> 01:18:07,000
edit it in private and then emailed as an attachment,
1949
01:18:07,000 –> 01:18:08,840
you aren’t looking at collaboration.
1950
01:18:08,840 –> 01:18:10,520
You are looking at compensation.
1951
01:18:10,520 –> 01:18:11,960
The team might still call it teamwork,
1952
01:18:11,960 –> 01:18:13,720
but structurally it means the environment
1953
01:18:13,720 –> 01:18:15,480
has failed to maintain enough confidence
1954
01:18:15,480 –> 01:18:17,080
for the work to stay in one place.
1955
01:18:17,080 –> 01:18:19,320
This is why version creation is such a massive tell.
1956
01:18:19,320 –> 01:18:22,040
Every time someone creates a new version of a file,
1957
01:18:22,040 –> 01:18:24,680
they are making a small design confession about the system.
1958
01:18:24,680 –> 01:18:27,080
It tells you that a human being needed more control,
1959
01:18:27,080 –> 01:18:28,520
more speed or more protection
1960
01:18:28,520 –> 01:18:30,920
than the official system was providing them at that moment.
1961
01:18:30,920 –> 01:18:32,840
Now I’m not saying that every duplicate file
1962
01:18:32,840 –> 01:18:34,200
is a sign of a broken culture.
1963
01:18:34,200 –> 01:18:36,200
Sometimes a copy is perfectly legitimate,
1964
01:18:36,200 –> 01:18:37,640
like when a template is reused
1965
01:18:37,640 –> 01:18:40,040
or a specific snapshot is needed for a legal audit.
1966
01:18:40,040 –> 01:18:42,040
The issue isn’t that duplication exists,
1967
01:18:42,040 –> 01:18:43,960
but rather whether duplication has become
1968
01:18:43,960 –> 01:18:47,080
the primary way the organization creates a sense of certainty.
1969
01:18:47,080 –> 01:18:49,000
When every important decision generates five
1970
01:18:49,000 –> 01:18:52,120
near identical versions across SharePoint, OneDrive, and Email,
1971
01:18:52,120 –> 01:18:53,320
knowledge isn’t being shared.
1972
01:18:53,320 –> 01:18:55,720
It is being recreated through constant movement
1973
01:18:55,720 –> 01:18:57,640
and that creates a massive downstream cost
1974
01:18:57,640 –> 01:18:59,080
for the business very quickly.
1975
01:18:59,080 –> 01:19:02,520
First, nobody is ever quite sure which version is the truth.
1976
01:19:02,520 –> 01:19:04,440
And second, ownership starts to blur
1977
01:19:04,440 –> 01:19:06,600
because every local copy feels like it belongs
1978
01:19:06,600 –> 01:19:08,280
to the person who saved it.
1979
01:19:08,280 –> 01:19:10,040
Third, the whole process slows down
1980
01:19:10,040 –> 01:19:11,800
because people have to do forensic work
1981
01:19:11,800 –> 01:19:13,400
to validate the history of a file
1982
01:19:13,400 –> 01:19:15,160
before they feel safe acting on it.
1983
01:19:15,160 –> 01:19:16,920
That is the real burden on your people.
1984
01:19:16,920 –> 01:19:18,040
It isn’t a storage problem.
1985
01:19:18,040 –> 01:19:19,560
It’s an interpretation problem.
1986
01:19:19,560 –> 01:19:20,840
Your high-value employees
1987
01:19:20,840 –> 01:19:22,600
are spending their time playing detective
1988
01:19:22,600 –> 01:19:23,880
just to answer the simple question
1989
01:19:23,880 –> 01:19:25,800
of which file is the real one.
1990
01:19:25,800 –> 01:19:28,520
Now, map that reality to your business outcomes.
1991
01:19:28,520 –> 01:19:30,440
If your leadership team is making big bets
1992
01:19:30,440 –> 01:19:32,680
based on content with an unstable history,
1993
01:19:32,680 –> 01:19:34,600
your strategic clarity is much weaker
1994
01:19:34,600 –> 01:19:36,760
than that polished reporting deck suggests.
1995
01:19:36,760 –> 01:19:38,680
If your commercial teams are rebuilding
1996
01:19:38,680 –> 01:19:40,600
the same analysis in three different folders,
1997
01:19:40,600 –> 01:19:43,320
the organization is consuming intelligence over and over
1998
01:19:43,320 –> 01:19:45,160
instead of letting it compound.
1999
01:19:45,160 –> 01:19:47,480
When a tool like Copilot enters this kind of environment,
2000
01:19:47,480 –> 01:19:50,120
it simply inherits all that existing ambiguity.
2001
01:19:50,120 –> 01:19:52,280
The AI doesn’t inherently know which file is the one
2002
01:19:52,280 –> 01:19:54,120
you actually mean if the environment hasn’t made
2003
01:19:54,120 –> 01:19:56,600
that distinction clear through actual operations.
2004
01:19:56,600 –> 01:19:58,520
In this step, I want you to get very concrete
2005
01:19:58,520 –> 01:19:59,960
with your observations.
2006
01:19:59,960 –> 01:20:01,560
Take the decision you mapped out earlier
2007
01:20:01,560 –> 01:20:03,560
and follow the trail of the supporting content
2008
01:20:03,560 –> 01:20:04,520
from start to finish.
2009
01:20:04,520 –> 01:20:06,680
Look at where the first version was created,
2010
01:20:06,680 –> 01:20:10,040
who touched it next and exactly when that second or third copy appeared.
2011
01:20:10,040 –> 01:20:11,800
Pay close attention to the file names.
2012
01:20:11,800 –> 01:20:16,440
When you see labels like Final V2 or use this one,
2013
01:20:16,440 –> 01:20:19,160
you are seeing people try to encode trust manually
2014
01:20:19,160 –> 01:20:21,560
because the platform failed to do it structurally.
2015
01:20:21,560 –> 01:20:24,040
You should also look for instances of recreation
2016
01:20:24,040 –> 01:20:26,200
where the same summary is rebuilt in PowerPoint
2017
01:20:26,200 –> 01:20:28,920
because the word version was too messy to use.
2018
01:20:28,920 –> 01:20:31,960
When the same answer has to be regenerated in multiple places,
2019
01:20:31,960 –> 01:20:34,840
the organization is telling you that its information architecture
2020
01:20:34,840 –> 01:20:36,920
is failing to support execution.
2021
01:20:36,920 –> 01:20:39,800
Data movement reveals your true organizational boundaries
2022
01:20:39,800 –> 01:20:42,760
much more honestly than any policy document ever could.
2023
01:20:42,760 –> 01:20:44,840
Where content is copied, trust is weak,
2024
01:20:44,840 –> 01:20:46,440
and where the version count explodes,
2025
01:20:46,440 –> 01:20:48,360
your alignment is likely nonexistent.
2026
01:20:48,360 –> 01:20:51,080
Step two isn’t just an administrative content audit,
2027
01:20:51,080 –> 01:20:54,360
it is a diagnostic tool for your entire operating model.
2028
01:20:54,360 –> 01:20:55,800
Follow the file, count the versions,
2029
01:20:55,800 –> 01:20:58,200
and notice exactly where the confidence breaks down.
2030
01:20:58,200 –> 01:21:01,000
The moment data has to keep moving just to stay usable,
2031
01:21:01,000 –> 01:21:03,640
the organization is showing you exactly where its structure
2032
01:21:03,640 –> 01:21:05,240
has stopped carrying the weight of the work.
2033
01:21:05,240 –> 01:21:09,560
Step three find hidden owners and measure friction.
2034
01:21:09,560 –> 01:21:12,040
After you’ve traced the decision and followed the data trail,
2035
01:21:12,040 –> 01:21:15,080
the next layer of the system becomes much easier to see.
2036
01:21:15,080 –> 01:21:18,280
You can finally identify who actually owns the movement of work.
2037
01:21:18,280 –> 01:21:20,360
I’m not talking about who has the title on the org chart
2038
01:21:20,360 –> 01:21:22,360
but who owns it operationally.
2039
01:21:22,360 –> 01:21:25,000
Most organizations are surprised by what they find here.
2040
01:21:25,000 –> 01:21:28,120
The real structure usually centers around a few specific people
2041
01:21:28,120 –> 01:21:29,640
who don’t look central on paper
2042
01:21:29,640 –> 01:21:31,320
but are indispensable in practice.
2043
01:21:31,320 –> 01:21:32,920
And these are the people everyone checks with
2044
01:21:32,920 –> 01:21:35,800
before they hit send on a draft or a proposal.
2045
01:21:35,800 –> 01:21:38,760
They are the ones who know if a specific number is safe to use
2046
01:21:38,760 –> 01:21:41,880
or which version of a plan is politically acceptable this week.
2047
01:21:41,880 –> 01:21:43,000
Sometimes they are managers,
2048
01:21:43,000 –> 01:21:46,840
but often they are long tenured specialists or executive assistants
2049
01:21:46,840 –> 01:21:48,520
who carry the institutional memory
2050
01:21:48,520 –> 01:21:50,600
that the official system never bothered to capture.
2051
01:21:50,600 –> 01:21:51,800
These are your hidden owners.
2052
01:21:51,800 –> 01:21:53,880
They aren’t hidden because they’re invisible.
2053
01:21:53,880 –> 01:21:56,280
They’re hidden because the formal design of the company
2054
01:21:56,280 –> 01:21:58,840
doesn’t admit how much it depends on them to function.
2055
01:21:58,840 –> 01:22:00,600
This matters because in any system,
2056
01:22:00,600 –> 01:22:02,440
dependency is the same thing as power.
2057
01:22:02,440 –> 01:22:05,560
If one person is the only one who can unblock or interpret work,
2058
01:22:05,560 –> 01:22:07,640
then that person is your real governance model.
2059
01:22:07,640 –> 01:22:09,400
This isn’t a knock on those individuals
2060
01:22:09,400 –> 01:22:11,640
as they are usually the ones holding the whole place together
2061
01:22:11,640 –> 01:22:13,240
but from a systems perspective,
2062
01:22:13,240 –> 01:22:15,400
they represent a single point of failure.
2063
01:22:15,400 –> 01:22:18,280
To find them you just have to ask a few simple questions.
2064
01:22:18,280 –> 01:22:19,800
Before a project moves forward,
2065
01:22:19,800 –> 01:22:21,880
who does everyone feel the need to check with?
2066
01:22:21,880 –> 01:22:25,240
If a specific person goes on vacation, does the work actually stop?
2067
01:22:25,240 –> 01:22:27,800
You are looking for the people who are carrying the context
2068
01:22:27,800 –> 01:22:30,680
that the system should have made visible a long time ago.
2069
01:22:30,680 –> 01:22:32,440
Once you have that map of hidden ownership,
2070
01:22:32,440 –> 01:22:34,520
you need to pair it with friction measurement.
2071
01:22:34,520 –> 01:22:36,120
Insight is great, but without measurement,
2072
01:22:36,120 –> 01:22:38,120
it’s too easy for a leadership team to ignore.
2073
01:22:38,120 –> 01:22:40,360
You don’t need a complex analytic suite for this.
2074
01:22:40,360 –> 01:22:42,520
You just need to track a few honest signals.
2075
01:22:42,520 –> 01:22:43,800
Start by counting the handoffs.
2076
01:22:43,800 –> 01:22:45,800
Look at how many times a piece of work moves
2077
01:22:45,800 –> 01:22:48,760
between different people or tools before it’s actually finished.
2078
01:22:48,760 –> 01:22:51,400
You should also measure the delay between those steps.
2079
01:22:51,400 –> 01:22:54,280
Focusing on the dead time where the work is just sitting there waiting
2080
01:22:54,280 –> 01:22:55,880
for the next person to act.
2081
01:22:55,880 –> 01:22:57,720
Count the versions, the clarifications,
2082
01:22:57,720 –> 01:23:01,080
and how often the same two or three people appear as validators
2083
01:23:01,080 –> 01:23:02,120
at every single stage.
2084
01:23:02,120 –> 01:23:03,160
That is your friction.
2085
01:23:03,160 –> 01:23:05,960
Friction isn’t just a minor inconvenience for your staff.
2086
01:23:05,960 –> 01:23:08,440
It is literal energy being drained from the company
2087
01:23:08,440 –> 01:23:10,280
to compensate for a weak structure.
2088
01:23:10,280 –> 01:23:12,360
If a single decision requires nine handoffs
2089
01:23:12,360 –> 01:23:13,720
and four different versions,
2090
01:23:13,720 –> 01:23:17,320
the problem isn’t that your people need to collaborate harder.
2091
01:23:17,320 –> 01:23:19,880
The problem is that the environment you’ve built
2092
01:23:19,880 –> 01:23:23,160
requires too much manual effort just to keep things coherent.
2093
01:23:23,160 –> 01:23:26,200
That is a system outcome, not a personal failing of the team.
2094
01:23:26,200 –> 01:23:27,800
When you make this visible, the conversation
2095
01:23:27,800 –> 01:23:29,720
with executives changes instantly.
2096
01:23:29,720 –> 01:23:31,880
You’re no longer complaining that a process feels slow.
2097
01:23:31,880 –> 01:23:35,560
Instead, you are pointing out that a decision requires 12 transfers of context
2098
01:23:35,560 –> 01:23:37,720
and depends entirely on two hidden owners.
2099
01:23:37,720 –> 01:23:40,120
That kind of language is architectural and measurable,
2100
01:23:40,120 –> 01:23:41,960
which makes the problem feel fixable.
2101
01:23:41,960 –> 01:23:43,880
You don’t need to buy new software to do this.
2102
01:23:43,880 –> 01:23:45,480
You just need the discipline to watch
2103
01:23:45,480 –> 01:23:47,880
how your current environment is actually behaving.
2104
01:23:47,880 –> 01:23:49,960
Once you see the friction and the hidden owners
2105
01:23:49,960 –> 01:23:53,080
the imagined version of your company loses its power
2106
01:23:53,080 –> 01:23:55,320
and you can finally start dealing with the real one.
2107
01:23:55,320 –> 01:23:59,160
Step four, simplify the environment before you scale it.
2108
01:23:59,160 –> 01:24:01,560
Once you can finally see where the friction lives,
2109
01:24:01,560 –> 01:24:03,960
your next move isn’t to add more capability
2110
01:24:03,960 –> 01:24:06,120
but to remove the unnecessary complexity
2111
01:24:06,120 –> 01:24:07,560
that’s holding everything back.
2112
01:24:07,560 –> 01:24:10,120
This is exactly where most organizations get the sequence wrong
2113
01:24:10,120 –> 01:24:13,480
because they see delays, duplication, and work around behaviors
2114
01:24:13,480 –> 01:24:15,560
and try to fix them by adding another layer.
2115
01:24:15,560 –> 01:24:17,640
They throw another workflow at the problem
2116
01:24:17,640 –> 01:24:20,360
or maybe another dashboard, another AI use case
2117
01:24:20,360 –> 01:24:24,440
or a new governance step to control the mess they already created.
2118
01:24:24,440 –> 01:24:27,000
But if the underlying environment is already fragmented,
2119
01:24:27,000 –> 01:24:28,920
scaling it just spreads that fragmentation
2120
01:24:28,920 –> 01:24:30,520
faster across the entire company.
2121
01:24:30,520 –> 01:24:33,240
You have to simplify the environment before you try to scale it,
2122
01:24:33,240 –> 01:24:36,520
which sounds obvious but it rarely actually happens in the real world.
2123
01:24:36,520 –> 01:24:38,520
Simplification doesn’t look as exciting
2124
01:24:38,520 –> 01:24:40,520
as a massive digital transformation
2125
01:24:40,520 –> 01:24:43,000
and it certainly doesn’t photograph well on a road map
2126
01:24:43,000 –> 01:24:45,400
or sound ambitious during a steering committee meeting.
2127
01:24:45,400 –> 01:24:50,040
From a system perspective, however, simplifying is often the most strategic thing
2128
01:24:50,040 –> 01:24:52,040
a leadership team can do for long term health,
2129
01:24:52,040 –> 01:24:54,040
complexity compounds operationally.
2130
01:24:54,040 –> 01:24:57,560
Meaning every extra team, duplicate channel and unclear permission layer
2131
01:24:57,560 –> 01:25:00,040
adds one more place where your context can split apart.
2132
01:25:00,040 –> 01:25:02,840
When that context splits, the people inside the system
2133
01:25:02,840 –> 01:25:04,840
have to reconnect the dots manually
2134
01:25:04,840 –> 01:25:07,800
and that manual labor is the hidden tax on your productivity.
2135
01:25:07,800 –> 01:25:12,280
Your job here is to reduce the number of places where work can drift away from the center
2136
01:25:12,280 –> 01:25:14,600
so start by looking at your collaboration spaces.
2137
01:25:14,600 –> 01:25:15,960
Do you really need all of them?
2138
01:25:15,960 –> 01:25:18,040
I’m not asking if they should exist theoretically
2139
01:25:18,040 –> 01:25:20,040
but whether they serve a purpose operationally
2140
01:25:20,040 –> 01:25:22,200
that justifies the noise they create.
2141
01:25:22,200 –> 01:25:25,000
How many team spaces are carrying overlapping work
2142
01:25:25,000 –> 01:25:26,760
and how many channels only exist
2143
01:25:26,760 –> 01:25:30,040
because no one wanted to challenge an old broken structure?
2144
01:25:30,040 –> 01:25:32,840
We often see private channels become permanent fixtures
2145
01:25:32,840 –> 01:25:36,280
because trust and clarity were never fixed in the shared space
2146
01:25:36,280 –> 01:25:39,800
but you shouldn’t try to centralize everything into one giant swamp either.
2147
01:25:39,800 –> 01:25:43,640
You are trying to remove the unnecessary branching that creates confusion
2148
01:25:43,640 –> 01:25:46,040
without adding any meaningful value to the business
2149
01:25:46,040 –> 01:25:49,480
and then you need to do the exact same thing with your content and documentation.
2150
01:25:49,480 –> 01:25:52,840
How many different places can a document live before it’s considered official
2151
01:25:52,840 –> 01:25:55,480
and how many libraries hold overlapping material
2152
01:25:55,480 –> 01:25:57,800
with slightly different versions of the truth?
2153
01:25:57,800 –> 01:25:59,880
Many people still rely on personal storage
2154
01:25:59,880 –> 01:26:03,320
because the shared environment feels too noisy or politically unreliable
2155
01:26:03,320 –> 01:26:06,280
so simplification means choosing authoritative locations
2156
01:26:06,280 –> 01:26:08,120
and making them socially real.
2157
01:26:08,120 –> 01:26:10,680
If a decision document lives in one specific folder
2158
01:26:10,680 –> 01:26:14,280
then that is where it lives and if a team knowledge base belongs in a certain spot
2159
01:26:14,280 –> 01:26:15,880
then the ownership stays there too.
2160
01:26:15,880 –> 01:26:18,920
When something gets archived it should stop competing with active work
2161
01:26:18,920 –> 01:26:21,720
as if it still belongs in the current flow of the day.
2162
01:26:21,720 –> 01:26:26,120
That kind of clarity reduces the mental work of interpretation immediately
2163
01:26:26,120 –> 01:26:28,840
and the same logic applies to your permission structures.
2164
01:26:28,840 –> 01:26:32,120
Most organizations carry layers of historical access
2165
01:26:32,120 –> 01:26:35,080
they no longer understand like project access that never expired
2166
01:26:35,080 –> 01:26:38,280
or groups that grant visibility long after the purpose is gone.
2167
01:26:38,280 –> 01:26:42,120
Access complexity eventually becomes organizational complexity
2168
01:26:42,120 –> 01:26:44,680
and if nobody understands who can see or approve what
2169
01:26:44,680 –> 01:26:46,680
then confidence in the system starts to drop.
2170
01:26:46,680 –> 01:26:49,160
When confidence drops checking behavior rises
2171
01:26:49,160 –> 01:26:52,840
which is why simplification must include reducing permission ambiguity
2172
01:26:52,840 –> 01:26:54,360
through clear owners and boundaries.
2173
01:26:54,360 –> 01:26:56,520
Control isn’t the goal here.
2174
01:26:56,520 –> 01:26:57,400
Clarity is.
2175
01:26:57,400 –> 01:26:59,720
Simplification isn’t just cosmetic cleanup work
2176
01:26:59,720 –> 01:27:02,200
but a fundamental shift in your operating model design
2177
01:27:02,200 –> 01:27:04,040
and that is how leaders need to frame it.
2178
01:27:04,040 –> 01:27:07,080
If you remove duplicate stores and clarify your sources
2179
01:27:07,080 –> 01:27:08,760
you aren’t just tidying up a platform
2180
01:27:08,760 –> 01:27:11,800
you are changing the conditions under which decisions happen.
2181
01:27:11,800 –> 01:27:14,200
You are lowering the amount of structural compensation
2182
01:27:14,200 –> 01:27:15,720
your people have to provide
2183
01:27:15,720 –> 01:27:17,480
and that is high level executive work.
2184
01:27:17,480 –> 01:27:22,200
There is another layer to this because simplification creates the conditions for true resilience.
2185
01:27:22,200 –> 01:27:25,640
fragile organizations don’t usually break because they lack activity
2186
01:27:25,640 –> 01:27:28,440
they break because too much depends on too many unclear parts
2187
01:27:28,440 –> 01:27:30,200
that only a few people understand.
2188
01:27:30,200 –> 01:27:33,960
One person knows where the real file is one team knows which channel matters
2189
01:27:33,960 –> 01:27:36,440
and one manager knows which copy is actually trusted.
2190
01:27:36,440 –> 01:27:38,440
That isn’t a sign of organizational maturity
2191
01:27:38,440 –> 01:27:40,440
it’s a massive concentration risk
2192
01:27:40,440 –> 01:27:41,800
that threatens the whole system.
2193
01:27:41,800 –> 01:27:44,520
As you simplify you should build redundancy where it matters
2194
01:27:44,520 –> 01:27:46,600
but I don’t mean redundancy as duplication
2195
01:27:46,600 –> 01:27:49,160
I mean redundancy as structural resilience
2196
01:27:49,160 –> 01:27:51,400
you want more than one person to understand the path
2197
01:27:51,400 –> 01:27:55,080
and more than one role to be able to move the work forward in a governed way.
2198
01:27:55,080 –> 01:27:57,240
This reduces single points of failure
2199
01:27:57,240 –> 01:28:00,120
without increasing the general chaos of the office
2200
01:28:00,120 –> 01:28:02,120
and that distinction is vital for growth.
2201
01:28:02,120 –> 01:28:04,280
A lot of organizations think they have redundancy
2202
01:28:04,280 –> 01:28:06,680
when they actually just have uncontrolled duplication
2203
01:28:06,680 –> 01:28:10,520
but duplication creates confusion while redundancy creates safety.
2204
01:28:10,520 –> 01:28:12,360
One of these weakens your execution
2205
01:28:12,360 –> 01:28:14,440
while the other protects it from the unexpected.
2206
01:28:14,440 –> 01:28:16,280
If you want to simplify before you scale
2207
01:28:16,280 –> 01:28:17,960
don’t ask how to roll out more
2208
01:28:17,960 –> 01:28:20,680
ask what structural compensation you can remove first
2209
01:28:20,680 –> 01:28:23,720
which team space is no longer serve a clear decision path
2210
01:28:23,720 –> 01:28:26,840
and which content locations are still creating parallel versions
2211
01:28:26,840 –> 01:28:31,400
of the truth you need to find which permission structures no longer reflect your business reality
2212
01:28:31,400 –> 01:28:34,440
and which hidden owners need their context redistributed
2213
01:28:34,440 –> 01:28:36,760
so the system can survive without heroics.
2214
01:28:36,760 –> 01:28:38,600
Once leaders start doing that work
2215
01:28:38,600 –> 01:28:41,720
technology stops acting like a layer placed on top of the company
2216
01:28:41,720 –> 01:28:44,440
and starts becoming an expression of its actual logic.
2217
01:28:44,440 –> 01:28:46,600
The environment becomes cleaner, more legible
2218
01:28:46,600 –> 01:28:49,640
and far less dependent on individual memory or work around behavior
2219
01:28:49,640 –> 01:28:52,440
that is the only point where scale becomes truly useful
2220
01:28:52,440 –> 01:28:54,440
because scaling a simplified environment
2221
01:28:54,440 –> 01:28:57,800
is a completely different animal than scaling a fragmented one.
2222
01:28:57,800 –> 01:29:00,200
In one case you are amplifying clarity
2223
01:29:00,200 –> 01:29:03,720
but in the other you are just amplifying confusion with better tools
2224
01:29:03,720 –> 01:29:07,560
the organization you manage isn’t the one described by your structure alone
2225
01:29:07,560 –> 01:29:12,280
it’s the one produced by behavior and movement inside your systems every day
2226
01:29:12,280 –> 01:29:15,560
conclusion most leaders are not actually managing the organization
2227
01:29:15,560 –> 01:29:18,920
they think they are managing they are managing a formal description of it
2228
01:29:18,920 –> 01:29:20,920
like an org chart a governance model
2229
01:29:20,920 –> 01:29:23,640
or a transformation narrative that sounds good in a slide deck
2230
01:29:23,640 –> 01:29:27,160
all of those things are useful and necessary but they are still incomplete
2231
01:29:27,160 –> 01:29:31,800
because the organization that determines your speed and trust is the one produced by behavior
2232
01:29:31,800 –> 01:29:34,200
you can see the real enterprise in the message patterns
2233
01:29:34,200 –> 01:29:38,520
the duplicated files the hidden owners and the side channels where work actually gets done
2234
01:29:38,520 –> 01:29:40,840
it lives in the places where work slows down
2235
01:29:40,840 –> 01:29:43,400
or escapes the official path just to survive the day
2236
01:29:43,400 –> 01:29:45,400
and that is the real business not the imagined one
2237
01:29:45,400 –> 01:29:49,480
this matters more now because AI and co-pilot are removing our ability to stay abstract
2238
01:29:49,480 –> 01:29:50,680
about these structural failures
2239
01:29:50,680 –> 01:29:54,680
for years the people inside your organization have been carrying the gap manually
2240
01:29:54,680 –> 01:29:58,680
by remembering what the system forgot and knowing which version of a file was safe
2241
01:29:58,680 –> 01:30:01,560
they knew who to ask and which workflow actually worked
2242
01:30:01,560 –> 01:30:05,160
acting as a form of human structural compensation that kept things moving
2243
01:30:05,160 –> 01:30:08,760
that is why many businesses looked more coherent than they really were
2244
01:30:08,760 –> 01:30:11,640
because your people were absorbing the design weaknesses for you
2245
01:30:11,640 –> 01:30:14,040
that kind of manual compensation doesn’t scale forever
2246
01:30:14,040 –> 01:30:17,560
and it definitely doesn’t scale into an AI enabled operating model
2247
01:30:17,560 –> 01:30:22,440
AI doesn’t work from your assumptions or your org chart it works from the environment you’ve actually built
2248
01:30:22,440 –> 01:30:27,240
the next phase of digital maturity isn’t about buying more tools it’s about having more honesty
2249
01:30:27,240 –> 01:30:29,720
regarding how decisions really move through your system
2250
01:30:29,720 –> 01:30:35,640
you need visibility into how knowledge holds together and how much of your current performance depends on individual heroics
2251
01:30:35,640 –> 01:30:37,720
instead of structural resilience
2252
01:30:37,720 –> 01:30:42,040
if you audited your organization the same way you ordered your technical systems
2253
01:30:42,040 –> 01:30:44,680
what would you actually find when you looked under the hood
2254
01:30:44,680 –> 01:30:49,160
would you find a business designed to sustain performance or one that quietly drains it through friction
2255
01:30:49,160 –> 01:30:55,320
that no dashboard currently names that is the real work now and it goes far beyond just deploying more capability
2256
01:30:55,320 –> 01:31:00,600
it requires seeing the operating reality clearly enough to stop confusing coordination effort
2257
01:31:00,600 –> 01:31:05,240
with actual organizational coherence if this changed how you see structure and behavior
2258
01:31:05,240 –> 01:31:08,760
leave a review for the podcast so the right people can find these conversations
2259
01:31:08,760 –> 01:31:13,000
if you want to continue this with me directly you can always connect with me on LinkedIn
2260
01:31:13,000 –> 01:31:19,080
the organization you manage is not defined by its structure it is defined by the behavior inside your systems






