4 comments

  • skeam 17 hours ago

    The mechanism (1) and (2) you've identified are tackling governance. If less people are producing, more people can decide. Flattening hierarchy or redistributing the decisional power seems to be one way to lift the governance bottleneck.

    Interestingly, human society is also a system that has been hugely impacted by sudden innovations increasing the production efficiency, each leading to an observable redistribution of power.

    So, will the best performing companies 10 years forward be the ones flattening hierarchy as much as possible?

    • eriam 16 hours ago

      Well the way I see it is that it's more a matter of what if more people are producing more efficiently but from the organization standpoint it's not apparent, it's a kind of DDoS on governance and decision, and a fast one.

      Now I don't see how flattening hierarchy could cure this. Decisions must still be taken for example for utilities and any other complex system and people must work so we need role shifts and we need process changes effective and apparent for organizations otherwise thay won't benefit and suffer from the shock.

      The analogy with COVID was also a kind of what if: could we have an economic confinement if efficiency gains are collapsing the economy ?

      • skeam 15 hours ago

        Flattening makes the vertical path faster even if the company has already optimized there, for instance, if 5% of someone work requires approval, and this person produces 50% more in a day, the 5% to be approved is suddenly way larger, this is one of the over-efficiency side effect that caught my attention.

        But it does not remove the horizontal coordination that high-stakes changes require (legal, finance, security, etc), so in a sense I agree, it doesn't totally cure decision making DDoS, but it helps.

        ---

        The COVID analogy is interesting, so your assumption is that companies will struggle to make profit because they'll operate changes to handle over-efficiency and these would lead to high financial losses?

        • eriam 4 hours ago

          Not exactly, there is a risk that instead of being collectively able to re skill the workforce we end up with massive layoffs and unemployment of young professionnals, what is currently happening.

          So I wonder could decisions be taken by officials to block layoffs in a kind of economic lockdown (similar to covid) to give time to adapt. Like "everybody freeze" we need people working no matter how fast things can move with AI because we fail to adapt as fast as the efficiency gains. Thats science fiction.

          And also what about, from a worker's pov, all these efficiency gains. More time for myself or for the company, if companies fails to harvest these workforce pools its both a failure for the company and the worker.