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Josh Rhoades's avatar

What this doesn’t explain is why the same argument keeps losing despite being correct. The CEO who wants one engineer per product team isn’t ignoring the CTO’s logic — the CEO has three other data points that feel equally valid: a board member who heard it worked at a portfolio company, a CFO model built on industry benchmarks nobody in the room generated, and a peer CEO who tried it six months ago and hasn’t hit the consequences yet. None of those people will be accountable when the wheels come off. The CTO will be. Which means the CTO’s actual job in that room isn’t to have the best argument. It’s to make the accountability gap visible before the decision lands. Not as a threat — as a structural clarification. Who owns the outcome if this goes wrong, and what does that look like in 12 months? That question changes the conversation more reliably than any stance does.

Marek Dulowski's avatar

These are a very good illustration of the underlying problem. Even though the logic may be sound, people won’t simply follow it because logic and/or metric math alone isn’t a viable alternative solution to the problem. We have to be verbatim about how it translates to execution, resource commitment and the desired outcomes. Only then does it inspire people to follow and support the stance. Essentially, it’s sales, but internally within the organization and even people who are brilliant technically, or as people managers, usually have problem with sales.

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