
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.



