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Showing posts from June, 2026

Premature Authority is creating massive Professional Noise

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  Premature Authority is becoming a dangerous form of professional noise on LinkedIn. Confidence is good. The problem begins when confidence arrives before knowledge, experience, and judgment. - When someone reads a few leadership books and starts coaching seasoned leaders. - When someone attends one certification program and advises founders carrying payroll pressure, investor expectations, governance complexity, and existential risk. - When someone picks up one article, one layoff, or one quarterly result and turns it into a sweeping explanation of why a company or industry succeeded or failed. This is not insight. This is intellectual overreach. It is becoming common because “thought leadership” is being sold as a shortcut to visibility and relevance. We are living in an age where vocabulary creates the illusion of wisdom. Say “culture”, “mindset”, “strategy”, or “psychological safety” with confidence, and people may assume there is depth behind the words. But senior leadership ...

AI is behaving like ERP

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AI is behaving like ERP now  You laid off people to save money on AI.  Now AI costs more than the people did.  So now what?  Can you go back?  Or you got to live with it?  People who have lived through ERP implementations will get a Deja Vu feeling here.  Let's set the context first.  I am sure you have already read about some very interesting recent news items regarding 'Cost of AI'  - One company accidentally spent 500 million dollars in a single month on Claude because no one set usage limits. - Uber burned through its entire 2026 AI budget by April. Per engineer per month? Between 500 and 2,000 dollars. - Microsoft canceled most of its internal Claude Code licenses because the justification couldn't survive the spreadsheet. - One healthcare enterprise consumed 1 trillion tokens in six months. 6 million dollars in unplanned costs before anyone realized what was happening. CFOs are now uncomfortable while CIOs are transfixed - whether to co...

You get tired by the amount of work you did NOT do

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  At the end of the day, You get tired by the amount of work you did NOT do. Think about it. The days you end up exhausted are rarely the days you were heads-down, building, solving, shipping. It's the days you spent circling. Postponing. Half-starting. Scrolling through decisions you never made. The idle time adds up. The deferred conversation. The hire you kept putting off. The brainstorming that you postponed. The pivot you knew was right but didn't call. Leaders, founders, professionals; the fatigue you feel is not always burnout from overwork. Sometimes, it is the heavy weight of everything you didn't move forward on. Stagnation is draining. Momentum is energising. Your mind knows the difference Before trying another productivity hack, ask yourself a question and answer honestly. "Am I tired because I did too much, or because I kept running in place? Am I running on the track or the treadmill? The answer usually points you exactly to where the real work is waiting...