
It’s perfectly true that, in the ultra short-term, sometimes you just have to power through a problem to reach a solution and devote whatever resources are necessary – no matter the cost and the trade-off against other important activities that need doing – to achieve a worthy goal.
However, that doesn’t always mean it’s the right decision, or even the best possible decision with an even slightly longer timeline in mind.
If you’re walking up to a bus stop and see your bus about to close its doors and pull away, maybe you should start running, powering through the short-term discomfort, if you like, to make sure you get where you want to get to as quickly as possible.
Equally, if buses on this route come every five minutes and it’s a particularly hot day you might decide not to bother.
Similarly, if you’re recovering from a hip operation.
Or you’re just going into town for a bit of aimless wandering around the shops rather than, say, going to work where you need to be at a particular place on time.
So you can power through things in the short-term. That doesn’t mean you always should. Or that, if you do, that’s always the best answer. Remarkably often it isn’t.
That’s because every time you power through a problem in search of a solution you are almost certainly generating extra costs and inefficiencies in the process.
At a simple level, maybe you’re paying everyone in the factory overtime to get a rush job out, so unless you’re charging your customer extra for a fast turnaround, you’re out of pocket.
And there is always an opportunity cost to powering through anything. Devoting all your resources to a single project, by definition means you starve another project, or projects, of those same resources. Maybe the activity those people could be doing instead would have (net-net) been more valuable to your business in the long-run than whatever they were helping you power through.
But my more fundamental objection to always powering through problems is that there’s an implicit assumption with that strategy that there is no other…and potentially better…way to achieve the same goal.
The minute you make that implicit mental leap, you lock yourself into a rigid, fixed business model which everyone devotes all their time and energy to delivering, to the exclusion of any other considerations. It can become a bit cult-like to the point where often the people who suggest there might be a better way of achieving the same goal are shouted down and seen as naysayers who don’t value the business as much as the people who are sweating blood and tears to reach a solution through power alone.
In reality, though, the naysayers are usually right. Even more so in anything other than the ultra short-term where the compounding effects of continuing to operate inefficiently come back to bite you big time.
Sure, if it’s one of those “once in a blue moon” events, by all means power through it as best you can.
But if you’re doing that several times a week, you institutionalise short-term thinking and bake in a state of constant chaos in your organisation. And that never ends well.
There’s a lot of it about...
There’s a lot of short-term thinking about.
Daily calls lists, monthly sales targets, quarterly profits, the earnings-per-share number your C-Suite’s bonuses are probably based on, and more besides all loom large inside most organisations.
If you work in the public sector, you’ll recognise the same dynamics, but there they manifest themselves through some bureaucrat or some politician trying to make a name for themselves, or some artificial objective put forward to make it look like the world is being improved for the better, when it’s really just a smokescreen for all the other important things they aren’t doing – and should be doing – instead.
How that feels on the ground is exactly the same, though. There is some overriding objective that sweeps through the organisation and everything else becomes entirely secondary to whatever that overriding objective might be.
That overriding objective, in turn, results in a boat-load of short-term thinking while people just power through whatever that objective might be. And, worse, that way of running your organisation becomes institutionalised so that very little happens any more unless it’s directly required to deliver that overriding objective.
At that point, your organisation is almost certainly in mortal danger because you’re deep in “not being able to see the wood from the trees” territory. People will ignore blindingly obvious better ways to achieve their organisational goals because everyone is locked into a fixed operating model which sucks up all the available resources to solve just one of the many problems your organisation likely has to solve.
Objectives aren’t a bad thing
It’s not that objectives, in themselves, are a bad thing.
Far from it – without them, people and organisations just drift aimlessly along, never accomplishing anything of note.
So objectives are important. Just not blind adherence to them, hard-wired into a rigidly predetermined operating model.
Let me give you an example.
If you know me well, you’d know that “doing the very best for our customers” is one of my deeply-held values. I normally bend over backwards to ensure customers are delighted with the service they get from any organisation I’ve been involved with over the years.
But rather than a rigid, unthinking “the customer is always right” approach, it’s a principle that needs to be balanced against a range of other factors.
In my very first Finance Director job, I had the unenviable task of having to explain to my boss, the CEO, that the reason the business didn’t make any money was because every time a job came in for one of the clients he looked after personally, every other job in the factory came to a halt while every resource we had was thrown at keeping the CEO’s clients happy.
Which wouldn’t have been so bad were it not for the fact that his number one client – and our company’s biggest – was also the least profitable client we had. They barely covered their costs…and frequently didn’t even do that…because they had used the immense volume they delivered to drive our prices down.
To be fair to the CEO, who I had a lot of time for, their previous Finance Director had never worked this out, much less pointed it out to the CEO. He focused mostly on producing monthly financial accounts, and didn’t get too excited about the nitty-gritty bit of making sure the factory ran as efficiently as possible.
But once our CEO understood that the problem he had with the bottom line was that all the work on profitable clients stopped the minute one of his break-even jobs came along, we started the process of untangling what had been our biggest client, in revenue terms, up to that point.
So, despite being someone who would bend over backwards to make sure a client was happy with our service, in this scenario, powering through the CEO’s client’s work by throwing all our resources at it made no sense, economically, practically, or logistically.
And it wasn’t like this was a temporary situation that we would eventually get through to the other side of. Our client wanted Rolls Royce service at Lidl prices and had no intention of allowing us to do anything about either end of that equation, so long-term losses from continuing to serve them were pretty much assured.
In that scenario, continuing to put the demands of a “bully” of a customer above everything else we might have done with a given hour of productive time in the factory with the resources at our disposal made no sense.
So we stopped “powering through” their demands. There was a better way for us to achieve our objective of making a fair bottom line return on the capital invested in our business.
Which, in this instance, involved telling our biggest customer to take their business elsewhere. Miraculously, having taken the biggest drag on our profits out of the equation, our business became a lot more profitable.
Weird, huh…?
A modern-day example
That business was a real-world business where people used machinery to make physical products which we sold to customers and shipped to them in trucks.
But the same principle applies today in the digital economy, for example with AI companies’ continued search for “more compute”.
Essentially, they are doing their best to “power through” the task of finding a way for computers to become human.
Leaving aside for a moment any richly-deserved questioning of the sanity of those involved, what all the AI companies have done is what the business in my first Finance Director post had done.
They have locked in a rigid operating model which they hope will deliver the objectives they seek…if only they throw enough resources at it.
It’s actually worse than that. It’s not like each incremental step towards their objective becomes incrementally less expensive, such that a dispassionate observer could discern a path to ultimate profitability.
No, quite the opposite. Each new step forward is more expensive than the step before it and, worse, they are making only tiny, tiny amounts of progress towards their ultimate goal. Incremental costs are huge and incremental benefits are tiny.
As business models go, I haven’t heard anything quite as insane as that at any time in my professional career.
Sure, in the early days, that’s sometimes true.
At a very mundane level, if you buy a new computer to start writing a programme for a new idea you had, that first purchase is an incrementally huge jump in cost relative to what you had before (ie nothing). And, at least in the beginning, you have derived no additional benefits because, by definition, you haven’t written anything you can sell yet.
So, understanding the wider context is important.
But, by the time you’ve spent a bazillion dollars on computing equipment, and you’re only seeing tiny incremental improvements in return for each incremental billion dollars you now spend, you’ve got a fundamentally broken business model.
Powering through that won’t get you where you want to go. It’s time for a rethink.
Despite that, at the time of writing, all the AI companies are in an arms race to pile on more and more capital expenditure in the hope that, if they throw enough computing power at the problem, they’ll solve their stated problem of turning computers into humans.
Again, leaving aside questions about the sanity of people who want to pursue that as an objective in the first place, all the available evidence is that “more power” isn’t the problem here. The AI companies are trying to solve a problem with power which power alone is incapable of solving.
I never cease to be surprised that a group of supposedly smart people seem to have so much trouble seeing that. It’s face-smackingly obvious from where I stand.
Elegance beats power
Going back in time, there was a tremendous example of how an elegant solution solved a problem that would otherwise have cost billions of dollars and taken years to come to fruition.
Back in World War Two, opposing armies had a big problem. The only way there was to communicate over long distances then was by radio. And the problem with radio was that anyone could tune into the same frequency and hear what was being said.
A common way to deal with that was to use a code book to translate a plain-text message into a meaningless string of letters sent via morse code which were decoded at the other end.
When done well, that’s quite an effective way of communicating “in public” in a relatively secure way. But if the enemy captures one of your code books, for example, everything you do is immediately insecure from that point onwards.
There was also the work of codebreakers at Bletchley Park, immortalised in the 2014 film “The Imitation Game”, who used the best technology of the day to throw maths at the problem of breaking the coded messages they had intercepted from the enemy.
The work of the Bletchley Park codebreakers was genuinely insightful and if you ever get a chance to visit Bletchley Park, you should, it’s one of the most fascinating places I’ve ever been to.
Nowadays, we’d use “more compute” to solve codebreaking combinations. And it works at some level. If you let a pattern-matching software programme run billions of combinations of potential words that might be hidden within a coded message, I’m prepared to bet that, sooner or later, you might stumble across the right solution.
The problem is, doing that at scale requires the investment of billions of dollars and there’s a time delay to build the buildings and computers which allow you to even attempt to solve that problem on anything other than a lab-scale basis.
But there was a more elegant solution.
A First World War veteran, who had been brought up on Native American reservations by his missionary parents, proposed that one way of developing an “unbreakable code” for the US forces in World War Two was to recruit Native Americans as radio operators. They could speak their own language to one another over the radio, be safe in the knowledge that the number of speakers of Native American languages in the Japanese and German armies was as close to zero as to make no difference.
This required no ruinously expensive capital investment, and there were no significant delays to getting the idea up and running (once the idea was green-lit) because the people concerned already knew how to speak their native languages and the Army already had the radios.
While this was a function most famously performed by members of the Navajo nation, many other Native American groups were involved too. The only criteria was that the people on both ends of each radio transmission had to come from the same background, for obvious reasons.
To this day, I think the use of “code talkers” (as they were called) is one of the most creative ways a significant problem has ever been solved, in peacetime or in wartime.
While the Japanese and Germans had plenty of people who could speak English, they had nobody who spoke Navajo, or any of the other Native American languages.
No amount of compute would have helped them translate Navajo into English, much less German or Japanese, because it came from entirely different linguistic roots with words, phrases, and grammar for which no direct equivalent even existed in the English language.
As elegant solutions go, this is one of the most inspired ideas there has ever been.
And I think of it often when people’s only solution to a recurring problem is to throw more power at it…whether that’s money, resources, or investment dollars.
When “more power” is your only solution to a problem, I can almost guarantee that you’re on the wrong path. Or, at the very least, a sub-optimal one.
There’s always a better way, but you need a level of insight and creativity to unlock it that you’ll never find through brute force alone.
And that’s true whether you’re a modern-day Silicon Valley tech executive or a Japanese general in the Pacific during WW2.
Elegance beats brute force pretty much every time, so don’t rely on power alone.
Over-index on elegance instead, and 99 times out of 100 you’ll make better, more sustainable, less expensive, more value-adding decisions in the process.








