yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Is Less Always More? 4 Simplicity Tips | Lisa Bodell | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Everyone says that they want to innovate, but then myself and my teams would go into companies, and the very people that hired us to come in and help them innovate were the very people that were holding us back from doing it when we got there. And I thought, why? And it was this whole idea of risk, fear, power, control, risk aversion.

And I started to ask everybody that I met a very simple question to get at the problem of why people were not able to innovate the way that they should. Here was the question: I asked them, what do you spend your day doing? And do you know what the answer was? I wasn't surprised by the uniqueness of the answer; I was surprised by the absolute consistency of it.

So if I talked to, let's say, 100,000 people a year across all different countries, companies, industries, levels within the organization, and I asked them what did they spend their day doing? Do you know what they say? Meetings and emails.

Now, I believe that people get up every day to do meaningful things. I don't have a single friend that wakes up, looks at their inbox, and feels extra popular because they have more people that have contacted them. People don't want to spend their day doing that; they want to work on work that matters.

So I think that getting to work that is simpler and eliminating those complexities or mundane tasks are not just going to make people more productive at work, but they're going to be more satisfied. They're going to have a sense of purpose, and our businesses, the results that we have there, are going to be dramatically better because of it.

So what I did is I tried to come up with a very insistent definition for simplicity, and I realize it's less of a definition and more around guidelines. I think there's four components to simplicity. The first is being as minimal as possible. Second is understandable as possible. The third is repeatable as possible. And the final is accessible as possible.

Now, most people just think of the first part—minimal, making it less than. And I think that that's true, but there's so much more than just that. Being able to minimize something, get rid of parts, that's a good first step with simplicity. The second piece is understandable, and that really gets to clarity.

We use so much jargon, so many catch phrases, so many more words than we need to, making it as understandable as possible so we can get time back is key. The next thing is repeatable. And repeatable is important so we stop making everything so custom, so one-off, and it also lets us leverage best practices.

You want teachers to make things repeatable in a classroom so we benefit from best practices. You want pilots, no matter what cockpit they go into, to have the same experience so that they can fly the plane. And then the last part is accessible. And that's really important because that's about transparency.

When you look at companies like Progressive Insurance that made it transparent how they do their pricing versus competitors, that's a real benefit. When you look at Google, when they allowed everyone to use their code so others could innovate along with them to make their products better, that's the benefit of making something accessible and simple.

So there's more than just making something minimal. If you do those four components—minimal, understandable, repeatable, and accessible—that's a great framework for you to approach everything that you do within your work.

More Articles

View All
Interpreting text features | Reading | Khan Academy
Hello readers! Today I’m going to be talking about text features, which is to say the parts of a text that aren’t just words. We look at text features to get a better understanding of what the text is all about. Although they’re not words, like I said, te…
WARNING: The Great Reset Of 2022 Explained
[Music] All right, fine, don’t ask me again. I will talk about the great reset. By the way, it feels weird starting a video off without the normal introductions, so let’s get that out of the way. What’s up, son? It’s Dad here, and yes, I will talk about t…
Embracing Death | Explorer
It’s interesting in our society, and you know how we do things. You know, we plan for so many life celebratory events. We plan for a wedding, we plan for a baby, we plan for a graduation from high school, from college. We plan for our career. But the one…
2015 AP Calculus BC 6a | AP Calculus BC solved exams | AP Calculus BC | Khan Academy
The McLen series for a function ( f ) is given by, and they give it in Sigma notation, and then they expand it out for us. It converges to ( f(x) ) for the absolute value of ( x ) being less than ( R ), where ( R ) is the radius of convergence of the McLe…
Mass spectrometry | Atomic structure and properties | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
In other videos, we have talked about the idea that even for a given element, you might have different versions of that element. We call those different versions isotopes. Each isotope of an element can have a different atomic mass, and that stems from th…
Why was George Washington the first president? | US History | Khan Academy
So in the early debates about the Constitution, there were folks that wanted a strong central leadership and other folks who didn’t because they felt it felt a lot like George III. How did the existence of Washington as a person affect the debate? It’s a…