The Friction of Daily Existence
The plastic chair in the visitor’s room at the correctional facility had a persistent, rhythmic squeak that seemed to mock the silence of the room. I was counting my steps to the mailbox-exactly 45 today-when I realized that the friction of my daily existence as a prison education coordinator wasn’t that different from the friction I see in the high-growth software companies my friends complain about over expensive, lukewarm coffee.
In this facility, if an inmate wants a specific textbook on Python or restorative justice, it must pass through 5 different layers of security screening. First, the chaplain. Then, the librarian. Then, the head of security. Finally, the warden’s office, and eventually, the mailroom clerk who may or may not be having a bad day. It takes 35 days to get a book into a pair of hands. The actual ‘work’ of the mailroom clerk takes 5 minutes. The rest is the tax.
In the tech world, you call this technical debt when the code is messy. But that’s a lie. Code is easy to refactor if you have the will. What you’re actually dealing with is organizational debt. It’s the accumulated layers of process, politics, and communication overhead that act as a silent, suffocating tax on every single action.
The Cost of Consensus: Elias’s Story
I’ve seen engineers spend 15 hours in meetings to discuss a 5-line change to a transactional email. They aren’t debating the logic; they are waiting for the Brand Voice Committee to decide if ‘Hey’ is too informal compared to ‘Hello.’
Time Spent on Single Notification (Elias)
Cost: $575 (Code) vs. $15,555 (Tax)
Elias spent the next 25 days chasing signatures. He had to prepare a slide deck for a committee that didn’t know what an API was. He had to explain why the email couldn’t be sent through the legacy system that everyone knew was broken but no one had the authority to decommission. By the time the email went live, the shipping feature it was supposed to support had already been delayed by a month.
The tax is always paid in spirit before it is paid in cash.
The Paradox of Protocol
I admit, I once believed that process was the only thing standing between us and total anarchy. In the prison, I argued for more rigid protocols to ensure ‘safety.’ I was wrong. I realized that the more protocols we added, the less safe we became because the staff became so focused on the paperwork that they stopped looking at the humans in front of them.
Diluted Ownership
When you have a committee for everything, no one is actually responsible for anything. Ownership is diluted until it becomes a vapor.
Scaling vs. Calcification
At 15 people, you shout. At 115, you need four meetings to explain why the first three were pointless.
The company begins to value the absence of risk over the presence of progress. There is a peculiar comfort in these meetings. It feels like work. You’re wearing a headset, you’re looking at a screen, you’re using words like ‘synergy’ and ‘alignment.’ But it’s a hallucination. Real work is the transformation of an idea into a tangible benefit for a user.
Cutting Through the Noise
I’ve noticed that the most successful technical teams are the ones that ruthlessly hunt down this organizational debt. They don’t just delete old code; they delete old meetings. They give engineers the autonomy to make decisions without asking for 5 permissions.
The Rubric Mistake
I remember a specific mistake I made early in my career here at the facility. I tried to implement a new grading system for our literacy program… We spent 5 months designing a rubric. It was a masterpiece of 15 pages. But when we finally rolled it out, the teachers hated it. It took them 25 minutes per student just to fill out the form.
The ‘Tax’ of the rubric was so high that they stopped teaching so they could spend more time grading.
Mission Success After Simplification
95% (Simple Scale)
Carrying a Debt Load of $55 of Process for every $5 of Value.
Fighting the Bureaucracy
Most organizations are currently carrying a debt load that would bankrupt them if it were financial. They wonder why the ‘rockstar’ engineers they hired are leaving for smaller startups. It’s not because they want more equity or better snacks; it’s because they want to build something without having to explain their existence to a Brand Voice Committee every Tuesday.
Organizational Debt in Pure Form
Total Days Elapsed
Days Waiting for Signature
Marcus needs a biology book, cleared, waiting for the vacationing Assistant Warden.
Sclerosis begins with a single unnecessary meeting.
In your company, the ‘biology book’ might be a new feature, a bug fix, or a simpler checkout flow. Your ‘assistant warden’ might be the VP of something-or-other who needs to feel included. The cost is the same: the slow, quiet death of momentum. We must stop pretending that this debt is a natural byproduct of growth. It isn’t. It’s a choice.
Stop Paying. Start Shipping.
You can walk through those [walls of Slack notifications and Outlook invites]. You just have to be brave enough to stop asking for permission to do your job. The tax is only mandatory if you keep paying it without complaint.
Acknowledge The Tax
Is this meeting shipping, or just feeling safe?
Define Responsibility
If the answer is ‘the committee,’ you have a cancer.
Accept Small Risk
Avoid stagnation for the comfort of bureaucracy.