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· 16 min read

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A lot of managers are looking at the same pattern right now. Someone who used to jump into problems early, help a teammate without being asked, and keep projects moving has gone quiet. Their work still gets done. Deadlines might still hold. But the lift is gone.

That's where the term gets messy. People hear “quiet quitting” and jump straight to attitude, laziness, or disloyalty. In practice, it's usually less dramatic and more useful than that. It's a change in effort, participation, and initiative that shows up while the employee stays in role.

For operations leaders, team leads, and anyone responsible for output, the quiet quitting meaning matters because it points to something measurable. Not gossip. Not vibes. A shift in how work gets done, how often people contribute beyond the minimum, and whether that shift is healthy boundary-setting or a sign that the system around them is no longer working.

· 15 min read

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Most advice about the equation of efficiency is too neat to be useful. It gives you a tidy ratio, usually output divided by input, and leaves out the harder part: deciding what counts as output, what counts as input, and what kind of waste you're trying to remove.

That shortcut causes trouble in operations. A factory manager can over-focus on machine utilisation and miss quality losses. A software leader can chase tickets closed per day and end up rewarding shallow work, duplicated effort, and frantic context switching. The formula looks objective. The behaviour it drives often isn't.

I prefer to treat efficiency as a measurement discipline, not a slogan. In physics, it starts with useful work compared with total energy consumed. In statistics, it means how close an estimator gets to the best possible use of available information. In digital work, the same logic still applies, but the measurement needs much more care. You need practical definitions, and you need boundaries that keep measurement lawful and credible.

· 15 min read

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Your dashboard is full of problems. Licence costs are drifting up. Support queues keep filling. Product wants faster delivery. Finance wants fewer tools. Team leads say people are losing focus, but nobody can agree on why.

That situation doesn't mean the business is failing. It usually means the business has grown faster than its operating habits. Every issue looks urgent when you view them as one flat list.

The useful shift is simple. Stop asking, “How do we fix everything?” Start asking, “Which few things are causing most of the cost, drag, or noise?” That's where pareto 80 20 becomes practical. Not as a slogan. As a filter for deciding what gets attention first.

· 15 min read

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A lot of IT projects fail in a boring way.

Nobody forgot how to deploy software. Nobody lost admin access. The project just drifted. Procurement bought one thing, operations configured another, team leads trained people on their own version of the process, and six weeks later leadership asked a simple question nobody could answer: are we moving towards the original goal?

That's usually not a tooling problem. It's a planning problem.

The top down methodology exists for this exact mess. You start with the finished structure, then break it into floors, rooms, wiring, and fittings. If you skip the blueprint and let each trade start where it likes, you don't get a building. You get a pile of expensive decisions that don't line up.

For IT and product teams, the method still gets misunderstood. Some people hear “top down” and think command-and-control. Others hear “strategy-led” and assume the details can wait. Both are wrong. A useful top down methodology gives direction first, then checks that direction against real usage, real constraints, and real people.

· 18 min read

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You look at the org chart and the headcount report says the team is basically intact. Then the sprint slips. A rollout stalls because the one person who understood the old deployment flow is gone. Finance asks why you're still paying for seats nobody uses. Support tickets bounce between people because ownership got fuzzy after two “small” exits.

That's usually the moment attrition stops being an HR term and starts looking like an operations problem.

The plain attrition rate meaning is simple. It's the rate at which people leave a team or company and aren't replaced. That last part matters. If someone exits and the role stays empty, your capacity dropped, even if payroll hasn't fully caught up with reality yet. In practice, that shows up as delayed work, tool sprawl, underused licences, longer onboarding pressure on the remaining team, and more meetings because fewer people still hold the context.

For IT leaders in the Netherlands, this lands fast. Hybrid teams can look stable on paper while actual delivery gets slower week by week. The damage isn't dramatic. It's operational drag. A few missing people, a few idle laptops, a few SaaS seats nobody reclaimed, a few senior staff spending too much time covering basics instead of moving projects forward.

Attrition is the quiet loss of capacity you feel before it appears clearly in the budget.

If you manage endpoints, software spend, or engineering throughput, attrition belongs on your dashboard for the same reason uptime and licence use do. It tells you whether the team that should be doing the work still exists in a usable form.