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Alan Schmidt's avatar

There's another reason for the downfall.

I was working for a contracting company writing software for the Boeing 787 project in the mid-2000's. Boeing wanted to do things differently this time, deciding that instead of having most of their talent in one facility, they would take advantage of the global market and spread production throughout the globe. The idea was they would take advantage of skill sets regardless of time zones. They quickly found out how difficult logistics became without physical proximity.

My company was horrifically behind, and it was always a game of chicken hoping another company that was horribly behind would blink first so we wouldn't get blamed for delays. When parts came, they found you couldn't just connect them like legos, and there were subtle differences in dimensions that forced them to go back to the drawing board.

The only effective way to manage large, technologically sophisticated, safety critical, projects is to get a massive swath of people in the same area so you can walk to a guy's desk and hash things out. When you don't know the guy half a world away, and their team might as well be from mars, you will never be able to get the candor you need. There's no spreadsheet in the world that can smooth out human factors.

DEI is a lot of the story, but don't underestimate how much managerialism has deluded themselves that process and metrics can replace old-fashioned human relationships.

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The Otter's avatar

I would argue that this goes well beyond a profit motive. I don't think pumping stock prices is the goal when companies such as Disney actively destroy their stock prices in favour of progressive ideology. It's easy to blame everything on sleazy capitalism, but there is something more sinister at play here.

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