Efficient Elements File
Consider the humble bicycle. It has two wheels, a chain, a frame, and handlebars. Remove any one of those, and it ceases to be a bicycle. Add a motor, a windshield, and a stereo, and you have a motorcycle—or a mess. The bicycle’s genius is its efficiency of purpose.
So, take a hard look at your work today. Ask yourself: What can I remove?
The most efficient element in any system is the one you decide not to build. The best task on your list is the one you decide not to do. The most valuable feature in your product is the one you decide not to ship. efficient elements
Yet, in our workflows, we constantly build motorcycles when all we needed was a bike. We create 20-slide decks for a 5-minute update. We hold hour-long meetings to solve a 10-minute problem. We write emails that take three paragraphs to say “Yes.”
We add more apps to our phones, more tasks to our to-do lists, more metrics to our dashboards, and more features to our software. The unspoken assumption is always the same: More equals better. Consider the humble bicycle
But look closely at any high-performing system—whether it’s a Formula 1 car, a healthy ecosystem, or a profitable startup—and you will notice a counterintuitive truth. They are not the most complex systems. They are the most systems. And efficiency is not about what you add; it is about what you leave in.
We live in an era obsessed with addition . Add a motor, a windshield, and a stereo,
Because when you strip away the noise, the friction, and the bloat, what remains are the —and those are the things that actually move the needle. What is one "efficient element" you couldn't live without? Let me know in the comments below.