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“Complexity: now available in six confusing formats none of which you asked for.”
Ever built something simple… then sabotaged it because it looked too easy?
Welcome to The Anti-Simplicity Bias — the sneaky EBD strain that convinces learning designers that “simple” means “lazy.”
In this episode, Steve Corney cracks open Chapter 8 of The Enough Bucket and confesses how he’s turned clean, functional courses into corporate drag shows of logic layers, jargon soup, and fake sophistication.
We talk about:
Why “too basic” is a compliment, not an insult.
How our fear of being seen as lazy fuels over-complexity.
The difference between smart simple and simple-minded.
How to earn simplicity instead of apologising for it.
Because learners don’t need your seven-step framework. They need clarity.
And simplicity isn’t a shortcut — it’s a skill.
🎧 Listen, laugh, and spot your own Anti-Simplicity moments.
Then join the post-episode chat on LinkedIn using #EBD and tell us your favourite “I made it more complicated than it needed to be” story.
By Steve Corney“Complexity: now available in six confusing formats none of which you asked for.”
Ever built something simple… then sabotaged it because it looked too easy?
Welcome to The Anti-Simplicity Bias — the sneaky EBD strain that convinces learning designers that “simple” means “lazy.”
In this episode, Steve Corney cracks open Chapter 8 of The Enough Bucket and confesses how he’s turned clean, functional courses into corporate drag shows of logic layers, jargon soup, and fake sophistication.
We talk about:
Why “too basic” is a compliment, not an insult.
How our fear of being seen as lazy fuels over-complexity.
The difference between smart simple and simple-minded.
How to earn simplicity instead of apologising for it.
Because learners don’t need your seven-step framework. They need clarity.
And simplicity isn’t a shortcut — it’s a skill.
🎧 Listen, laugh, and spot your own Anti-Simplicity moments.
Then join the post-episode chat on LinkedIn using #EBD and tell us your favourite “I made it more complicated than it needed to be” story.