Author: md

  • Can your organization withstand its current rate of growth?

    Can your organization withstand its current rate of growth? Results are coming in.The team is growing.New initiatives are already in motion. Nothing appears to be wrong. And yet, there is a sense.Can this scale, as it is? That intuition has a basis. As speed increases, organizations begin to fragment.Decisions do not keep up.Interpretations diverge across teams.Specific individuals quietly hold everything together. And still, results continue.So nothing appears to be wrong. But it has already begun. It breaks while succeeding. Organizations do not break because something went wrong.They break while still producing results. What is being held together by people is…

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    Does Measuring Meaning Even Make Sense?

    Why I Created KMI, and Where Semantic Flow Truly Began We Move Because Something Feels Meaningful People do not move because they are told to.They move only when something makes sense to them. Think about the sound of a morning alarm. Almost no one enjoys it. Yet we get up. Not because the sound is pleasant, but because it carries meaning. Being late is worse. The discomfort is meaningful. Now imagine the same alarm on a day off. Most people turn it off and go back to sleep. The sound has not changed. The tool has not changed. What disappeared…

  • Meaning Is Medicine and Poison

    Why Semantic Flow Designs Structure, Not Meaning Why Is “Meaning” Everywhere Now? “Find meaning in your work.”“Purpose-driven organizations.”“Employee engagement.” In recent years, meaning has become one of the most frequently invoked words in management, leadership, and organizational design. Consultants emphasize it. Executives proclaim it. Surveys attempt to measure it. The idea is intuitively appealing. People move when they feel something matters. They endure difficulty when they believe their effort has purpose. Meaning motivates more powerfully than orders. And yet, something feels off. The more organizations talk about purpose, the more cynical the front lines become. The more engagement is measured,…

  • The Machine That Gave Too Many Answers

    A fable about a city that got lost searching for the “right” answer. Prologue: The Noble Question The people of that city were sincere. Everyone treated their lives with great care. “What is this time used for?”“Who does this work help?”“Does this choice lead to a better future?” They asked for Meaning before they acted. It was a beautiful habit.They didn’t want to live unconsciously; they wanted to walk with conviction. That question was the source of the city’s richness. Part I: The Machine That Cleared the Fog One day, a revolutionary system was introduced to the city.It was a…

  • Priced Out of Reality

    When it became more rational to hire computing power than to hire people: a story of ultimate gentrification. Prologue This is a story about a city that does not appear on any map.A city that may belong to our future, or perhaps already exists beneath our feet. Once, our wish was simple. We wanted just a little convenience. Translation. Image generation. Video. Magical experiences delivered instantly, almost for free. We loved that world. It made everything feel unlimited. Few stopped to think about the price of “free.” We believed we were users. But from the system’s perspective, we were resources…

  • The Brewery That Tried to Stop the Drift

    A fable about a process that could not be perfected, and the decision that followed. Every time we ran it, the output was different. Not because we changed anything. Because that’s what the process does. There was a place where a certain drink had been brewed for as long as anyone could remember. No two batches were ever exactly the same. Sometimes the difference was obvious. Sometimes it was so small that only the makers noticed. A slightly brighter note. A quieter finish. A warmth that lingered longer than expected. They called it the drift. Not because it was wrong,…

  • The Shelf Life of “Wow”: Why Value Fades Faster Than Function

    The excitement of a new purchase often disappears long before the product breaks. How do we design value that doesn’t just sparkle on Day 1, but deepens over time? The “Unboxing” Peak Do you remember the excitement of unboxing your latest smartphone? The sleek design, the flawless screen, the promise of a more organized life. Or perhaps that first sip of coffee in a shop that promised you a “special moment” in your daily routine. These are the moments when we feel the Value Proposition most intensely. But let me ask you: How long did that sparkle last? A month?…

  • Step Off the High-Speed Merry-Go-Round

    Choosing not to chase technology is the most strategic move of our time. The Carousel Was Meant to Be Slow A merry-go-round at an amusement park is designed to be gentle. It spins slowly enough for children to wave at their parents and for parents to snap photos. It is safe, enjoyable, and predictable. But imagine if that merry-go-round suddenly began to spin at extreme speed. You cling to the pole for dear life. The scenery blurs into streaks of color. You want to get off, but you can’t. “The next tech is coming!”“Our competitors just adopted it!”“We can’t fall…

  • Magic Wand Syndrome: Why the “Latest” Tech Often Disappoints Us

    We expect new tools to solve our problems instantly. But without designing for “Meaning,” even the most advanced device becomes an expensive paperweight. The Parable of the Pencil A pencil is unremarkable.And that ordinariness is precisely what makes it extraordinary. You pick it up.You write.You erase. There is no preparation, no hesitation.The barrier between “having a thought” and “shaping that thought” is essentially zero. This frictionless access is why the pencil has survived for centuries. Now consider the digital stylus. It is a marvel of modern engineering with pressure sensitivity, tilt detection, seamless cloud sync. And yet, when a spontaneous…

  • You Train New Hires, but Expect Robots to Be “Plug-and-Play”?

    The hidden reason why tech adoption fails, and why we need to measure “Meaning” before we measure results. Introduction “Digital Transformation (DX).”“AI-driven Innovation.” Almost every company today rallies behind these slogans. Yet, how often have you seen a business introduce cutting-edge AI tools or robots, only to see the expected results vanish? Instead of efficiency, confusion reigns on the ground. If you’ve witnessed this scene, you are not alone. The essence of the problem isn’t the technology itself. The problem is that we are misjudging the impact level of the transformation. History Repeats Itself: The Lesson of the Electric Motor What did…