LevelUp Leadership | Executive Coaching, AI and Management
Learn how to identify the real bottleneck in your organisation and stop wasting resource on activity that looks like progress but compounds the problem. Most organisations under pressure do more of what is visible rather than what is actually constraining performance. In this solo episode, Lee introduces the Theory of Constraints and explains why well-intentioned effort, extra headcount, bigger campaigns, and increased activity, so often makes the underlying problem worse rather than better. Using a practical story about an apple farm and three corporate scenarios spanning software development, recruitment, and retail, Lee walks through the pattern of misdiagnosed bottlenecks and what it costs when leaders optimise the wrong part of the system. The episode closes with one question worth sitting with before the end of the week. CHAPTERS 00:00:00: What if your effort is making the problem worse? 00:01:30: Introducing the Theory of Constraints 00:03:30: The apple farm story 00:07:00: Scenario 1: Software development and testing queues 00:08:30: Scenario 2: Recruitment pipelines and candidate attrition 00:10:00: Scenario 3: Retail conversion and checkout failure 00:11:30: Why leaders keep pointing effort at the wrong place 00:13:30: What effective leaders do differently 00:15:30: The question to ask this week RESOURCES MENTIONED The Goal by Eliyahu Goldratt: The 1984 business novel that introduced the Theory of Constraints. Enhanced Leadership by Lee: Lee's book on leadership under pressure. https://mybook.to/EnhancedLeadership KEY TAKEAWAYS FOR LEADERS Every system has one binding constraint. Improving anything else first is unlikely to improve overall output, and may worsen it. Slowing the pipeline to fix the bottleneck is not retreat; it is precision. Vanity metrics, lines of code written, applications received, footfall generated, measure activity rather than system health. The bottleneck is often where the politically sensitive or technically complex work sits, which is precisely why it gets avoided. The most useful question this week: is your effort aimed at the actual constraint, or at the part of the problem that is most comfortable to address? KEY TAKEAWAYS FOR COACHES Clients under pressure often accelerate the wrong activity. Use the bottleneck framing to help them step back and map the whole system before recommending action. The apple farm story is a useful coaching tool: ask where the rotting pile is, not where the picking is fastest. Watch for vanity metrics as a signal that a client is measuring effort rather than flow. Thank you for watching/ listening.#ad Editing my podcast used to be the most time-consuming part of my week. I now use Descript to edit my audio and video by simply deleting words from a transcript. It allows me to create my YouTube Shorts and TikTok clips in a fraction of the time.If you want to try it for your own projects, you can sign up here: https://get.descript.com/LevelUpUsing this link costs you nothing extra, but the small commission I receive helps support the work I do on my podcast and articles. Paid plans start at around £12 / $16 per month (billed annually) for the Hobbyist tier.Music, jingles, and images - attribution.Podcast Background Track: https://pixabay.com/users/poorartistt-45918667/Guitar Jingle: https://pixabay.com/music/introoutro-guitar-intro-ident-151972/Images: https://gemini.google/overview/image-generation/ & https://www.perplexity.ai/© 2026 LevelUp.This episode is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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