We Can't Keep Doing This concept cover
← Back to the trilogy

Book three · The system creating the pressure

We Can't Keep Doing This

How to Build Work That Does Not Depend on Heroics

A book about organisations that appear successful because capable people repeatedly compensate for weak decisions, hidden work, overload and poor design.

In developmentFirst edition plannedPublished by PressureReady

What the book is about

Success can hide a broken system.

Capable people cancel plans, stay late, use personal contacts, correct data at midnight and protect the result. From outside, the organisation looks successful. Inside, everyone knows how close it came to failure.

The danger begins when repeated rescue becomes part of the design. The plan assumes that somebody will absorb uncertainty. The schedule assumes that somebody will work late. The budget assumes that hidden labour is free. The organisation survives—and mistakes survival for proof that the system works.

What kind of system needs people to rescue it every week?
The real operating systemHow work moves through relationships, favours, private trackers, memory and local rescue.
Rescue dependencyHow reliable people become infrastructure and prevent the organisation from seeing its own weakness.
The hidden billQuality erosion, fatigue, distrust, disengagement, deferred work and borrowed reliability.
Building work that can breatheVisibility, real priorities, authority, handover, redundancy and repair after the emergency.

Who it is for

Leaders and professionals in organisations where everything is urgent, the same people repeatedly save the day, meetings replace decisions, work depends on memory and the phrase “temporary arrangement” has lost all meaning.

Its place in the trilogy

This is the organisational-design lens. The trilogy begins with the person, moves through delivery, and ends with the system. Pressure will happen. Impossible requests will happen. Requiring permanent heroics is a choice, even when nobody remembers making it.