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In the last episode, we talked about assumptions.
How they stack. How they compound. And how unverified beliefs quietly shape system behavior before anyone notices.
But assumptions become most dangerous in one particular kind of environment:
Fast ones.
Because the faster a system moves—
the less time exists to detect issues, to interpret signals, or to correct mistakes.
And yet many organizations make the opposite mistake.
As systems speed up—
they try to remove process.
Reduce friction.
Increase agility.
Move faster.
But speed does not reduce the need for governance.
It increases it.
Today we’re talking about speed pressure.
And why one of the most common organizational mistakes is assuming faster systems require less structure—
when in reality—
they require more.
Because speed doesn’t eliminate risk.
It compresses time.
And when time compresses—
small failures become catastrophic much faster.
Because in fast systems—
speed requires more boring structure.
By Jordon KeenIn the last episode, we talked about assumptions.
How they stack. How they compound. And how unverified beliefs quietly shape system behavior before anyone notices.
But assumptions become most dangerous in one particular kind of environment:
Fast ones.
Because the faster a system moves—
the less time exists to detect issues, to interpret signals, or to correct mistakes.
And yet many organizations make the opposite mistake.
As systems speed up—
they try to remove process.
Reduce friction.
Increase agility.
Move faster.
But speed does not reduce the need for governance.
It increases it.
Today we’re talking about speed pressure.
And why one of the most common organizational mistakes is assuming faster systems require less structure—
when in reality—
they require more.
Because speed doesn’t eliminate risk.
It compresses time.
And when time compresses—
small failures become catastrophic much faster.
Because in fast systems—
speed requires more boring structure.