We add more apps to our phones, more tasks to our to-do lists, more metrics to our dashboards, and more features to our software. The unspoken assumption is always the same: More equals better.
So, take a hard look at your work today. Ask yourself: What can I remove? efficient elements
Consider the humble bicycle. It has two wheels, a chain, a frame, and handlebars. Remove any one of those, and it ceases to be a bicycle. Add a motor, a windshield, and a stereo, and you have a motorcycle—or a mess. The bicycle’s genius is its efficiency of purpose. We add more apps to our phones, more
But look closely at any high-performing system—whether it’s a Formula 1 car, a healthy ecosystem, or a profitable startup—and you will notice a counterintuitive truth. They are not the most complex systems. They are the most systems. And efficiency is not about what you add; it is about what you leave in. Ask yourself: What can I remove