The Balance Between Busyness and Flow
In any organization, there’s a common belief that keeping everyone busy means higher productivity. But in reality, if you keep everyone fully occupied, the system starts to slow down. When every person or process is running at full capacity, there’s no room left to adjust, respond, or innovate. One small delay or mistake can ripple through the whole system, creating bottlenecks and stress.
A well-managed operation doesn’t aim for constant busyness — it aims for smooth flow. That often means some people seem “idle” at times, but that idle time is actually a buffer that keeps the system flexible and responsive. Think of it like a city’s traffic: if every road were filled to the limit, movement would stop. But with reasonable spacing, everyone gets where they’re going faster. Efficiency is not about doing more every minute; it’s about keeping the whole system moving without friction.