
One of the siren calls of the tech industry is to remove friction from our lives – to make everything go more smoothly, more efficiently, and deliver better results faster.
And one of the problems I have with the tech industry is that they’re mostly either inveterate liars or they’re far too intellectually limited to be allowed out the house without supervision.
You see, friction is not always a bad thing. Far from it.
If you want to drive your car to see a friend, friction is what makes the tyres grip the tarmac firmly enough to propel your vehicle down the road.
Rubbing your hands together on a cold day to keep yourself warm? That’s friction at work.
When you write with a pencil on a piece of paper, friction is what makes the tiny, microscopic pieces of graphite break off and stick to the page.
So, in a very real sense, in the real world, friction in and of itself isn’t a problem. In fact many of the aspects of our everyday lives would be impossible without it.
But moving away from the physical realm, can friction be a good thing elsewhere? In business, perhaps?
Here, it’s more of a mixed bag, but friction still plays a number of valuable functions, so let’s not move too quickly to dismiss the importance of it, much less work hard to eliminate it.
Approval processes
Approval processes are intentionally-designed organisational friction, mostly for good reason.
The likelihood is that, in your organisation, your lowest-ranked employee can’t spend a bazillion dollars on buying your biggest competitor on their own say-so. Friction has been introduced to make sure people spending company money are suitably authorised to do so by the board, on behalf of the owners of the company.
As a principle, that’s a good thing, for a whole host of reasons. Carried to an extreme, that’s a different matter.
I once worked for an organisation where, to make an overseas business trip, approval was required from seven or eight different parts of the organisation. That’s far too many, especially since, as a senior executive, I was already reporting directly to the CEO.
That approval process became either a pointless rubber-stamping exercise (because the CEO had already given the OK) or the opportunity for some petty bureaucrat to flex their muscles and do things like spending all day googling hotel costs and taking great delight in pointing out I could have saved £2 a night on hotel costs, if only I’d booked a hotel 20 miles outside the city centre of some foreign land.
Normally, we’d then have a bit of email to-ing and fro-ing about that actually making it more expensive for me to stay there as I’d need to add taxi costs back to the city centre on top of the hotel costs, which would cost vastly more than just paying the extra £2 per night for a city centre hotel.
Finally, after a week or so, they’d relent. But in the meantime, the airfare would have increased by £300-400, wiping out even the theoretical – but impractical – savings on offer initially.
Notwithstanding extreme examples like that one, the idea that there shouldn’t be any approval processes at all for spending company money…or worse, that some AI agent should decide what to spend and on what terms…is insane for any well-run business.
Some friction to stop people spending company money unwisely is a good thing.
No friction at all, so people can spend whatever they want, is not.
The key is a balance.
Emails
Emails are a great idea. No more nipping down to the post office because you’ve run out of stamps. No more wasted time searching for an envelope. No more delays while a piece of paper physically moves through the postal system – your message lands in your recipient’s inbox immediately.
So emails have reduced friction, for sure. But that’s not necessarily a good thing.
At the risk of sounding like my own grandad, in the old days you tended only to write a letter about things that mattered. And there was a cost to it, so you didn’t waste time and effort writing a letter if you could just pass on a message to someone the next time you saw them.
Friction played an important role.
When I came back from a recent holiday, I had 400 or so emails waiting for me to read through and respond. 20+ years ago, I’d have had perhaps a dozen letters waiting for my attention after being a way for a week or two.
Removing friction here has not been a good thing.
One of the main reasons your email inbox is full of spam is that it costs tiny fractions of a penny to keep spamming you with emails. Pre-emails, it might have cost £1-2 to send a letter…more like £5-6 now, probably.
That wasn’t enough to put people off with a genuine need to communicate something important. But it was high enough that companies wouldn’t throw away £1million on postage in the hope that someone might respond and buy whatever they were selling.
The reason your emails are packed full of junk are that the tech industry “removed friction” from the communications process and made everything worse.
Now, having caused the problem, the tech industry is trying to sell us solutions like AI agents to “read through your emails and decide what’s important, before responding to the important emails on your behalf”.
I can’t say it strongly enough – this is insane. It’s like the Medellin Cartel selling therapy on how to kick a drug addiction, having caused the problem themselves in the first place.
There are some upsides to being able to email instead of sending a letter. But some significant downsides too.
Some friction in the 1-to-1 communication process is a good idea. Our lives have been positively harmed by Big Tech’s, largely successful, efforts to eliminating it.
Experience
To become an expert in something…accounting, let’s say, as a random example…takes time and effort, and requires the demonstration of a certain level of intellectual capability due to the necessity to pass a series of exams to reach chartered status.
Another way to think about this process is as an example of friction.
Again, this type of friction is a good thing, on balance. Very few people think it’s a good idea to trust their company money, or their forward financial planning, to people who know nothing about accountancy.
Unfortunately many of those people work in the tech sector where they see inconveniences like the need to pass professional exams in a subject as “gatekeeping”…which, is always a bad thing in their book. They’re hell-bent on eliminating friction, after all.
The tech industry’s solution is to set up AI agents to manage your finances instead, so you no longer require an accountant to do that.
Now, if you’re comfortable handing your financial future across to people who know nothing about accountancy, but can write the code which makes the AI agent work, then go right ahead. I might laugh at you, but I’m not going to stop you.
Contrary to popular belief, perhaps, accounting isn’t just the matter of adding up the numbers on a spreadsheet. I’m always asking myself questions about any set of figures, or any invoice I’m presented with, which have nothing to do with adding up the costs.
Some of the biggest insights I’ve had in my career have come from noticing things that would have been easy to ignore and just add them to the spreadsheet anyway. To do that, you need a combination of deep technical expertise and the ability to think critically which goes far beyond just processing the numbers.
And that’s something all those “friction reducing” apps are incapable of doing. Sure, they can tell you that your expenses are 5% higher this year than last year, but for any organisation being run remotely professionally, that shouldn’t come as news. Your existing systems should already be picking that up and reporting on it.
But “removing friction” here means that people who don’t have the technical expertise necessary to really understand what’s going on are making decisions which might have significantly adverse legal and tax consequences for them somewhere down the line.
Some friction in the field of professional advice (financial advisors, accountants, lawyers, and the like) isn’t a bug it’s a feature.
That friction means it’s less likely – not, in all fairness, completely unlikely, but significantly less likely vs the general population – that you’re not acting on the instructions of an imbecile or a crook when it comes to managing your money or arranging your affairs.
Once more, without some friction, results tend to be sub-optimal, to put it as kindly as possible.
Who likes friction to be eliminated?
In business settings, the people who like friction to be eliminated are mostly crooks.
There’s a reason all the biggest financial scams come with a big dose of “you’ve got to do this right now…it’s really, really important…or dire consequences will follow”. Crooks always want you to take action before you’ve thought it through properly, so they always introduce plenty of jeopardy and a tight timescale.
That’s precisely why so many otherwise intelligent people hand across their credit card details without a second thought to people who disappear with their life savings.
And whilst I’m not saying that everyone who sends a bulk-produced cold email is a crook, there’s a vastly higher number of people at the shadier end of the business spectrum for whom this is their preferred method of outreach. The reality is they’d be a lot less successful in a face-to-face business setting making the same pitch.
Eliminating approval processes is also high up the list for most crooks, because the fewer approval processes there are, the fewer people might ask potentially awkward questions which might result in them getting found out.
I know tech people can only think in straight lines…in black or white…in yes or no decisions…in “if this, then that” structures.
And it’s not that reducing friction is an inherently terrible idea. A large part of my career was spent doing exactly that.
But you need a human…one with appropriate qualifications and experience…to take a view on the optimum level of friction in any process.
The answer is almost never that there should be no friction at all. Unfortunately (for the tech sector) no tech yet invented can determine how much friction is “enough”, or where the sweet spot is.
It’s very easy to get tech to eliminate every source of friction. But often those sources of friction are there for a good reason – in principle if not in practice.
Eliminating all friction is an incredibly risky proposition. Sure, tidy it up where you can. Streamline it where necessary. Make it more efficient when you can do so without creating a greater risk to your organisation than whatever notional savings might be on offer in the process.
But eliminate friction at your peril.
Not all friction is bad. It turns out that much of it is invaluable.








