C-Coach. Human Capability Infrastructure
The GapThe Cost of Getting This Wrong

It is not the symptoms.
It is the cause.

You have named it differently at different points. A productivity issue. A capacity problem. A people challenge. The name has shifted. The cost underneath has not.

Think of a bearing that has started to wear. The machine still runs. Output is still there. But there is a resistance that was not present before. A small additional cost in every cycle.

It does not stay small. As the wear increases, the resistance increases. By three years the cost is embedded in every process built around it. The repair is no longer a bearing replacement. It is a structural rebuild.

That is what an unaddressed capability gap does. The friction is real. It compounds. And the longer it runs, the more of what you have built has adapted around it rather than through it.

These are not projections. They are present in most organisations that arrive at this conversation, often named as something else.

Pattern One

Decision drag

The decision does not take too long because people are indecisive. It takes too long because people gather more information than the decision requires in order to feel protected before making it.

The typical response is a decision-making framework. That addresses the output without reaching the cause. The cause is not that people do not know how to decide. It is that making a call does not feel natural when the answer is not clean. The framework gives people a process. It does not give them the competence to stand behind a judgement under pressure.

Pattern Two

Invisible rework

The rework is not a process failure. It is the accumulated cost of people choosing the controllable channel over the one that would resolve things faster.

The email drafted five times instead of the two-minute conversation that would have closed it. The document iterated in circles instead of the discussion that would have landed it. The email is safe. It can be controlled, timed, wordsmithed. The conversation is variable. That choice, repeated across teams and weeks, is what shows up as rework on no budget line.

Pattern Three

Attenuated output

The salesperson in administration rather than with the customer. The administration is predictable. The customer conversation is variable and potentially exposing.

People move toward work they can control and away from work that presses against what they feel less sure of. The narrowing is not laziness. It is a rational response to an environment where the controllable feels safer than the valuable. The work that feels safest is rarely the work that matters most.

Pattern Four

Management compression

The manager does the work instead of having the conversation that would change the behaviour. Feedback about technical matters gets given. Feedback about behaviour, the thing actually driving the problem, rarely does.

Holding that conversation requires a level of capability most managers were never supported to develop. So the work gets done around the person. The pattern continues. The manager's capacity disappears into maintenance, not management.

Why It Gets Worse

Managing around it makes it heavier

Each pattern creates the conditions for the others. Decision drag produces rework. Rework produces protective behaviour. Protective behaviour produces management compression. And the typical response to any one of them adds weight without reaching the cause.

Add oversight to decision drag and you increase the load on the people whose overloaded judgement was generating it. Add process to rework and you add interface cost to every handover, including the ones that were already working.

The bearing wears faster under the additional friction.

What Three More Years Produces

The projection

The manager who was compensating has become the model of how management works here. Escalation that was exceptional at year one is the default routing by year three.

The process added to manage around the friction is now permanent overhead. Each layer adds interface cost without touching the cause. The high performer who was narrowing has made a decision. The replacement inherited the same conditions.

The people carrying the most weight are the most at risk. They are also the most difficult to replace.

What Changes the Trajectory

The trajectory changes when the cause is addressed

Not when the symptoms are managed. When the capability gap is addressed, these patterns begin to reverse. Decision drag reduces because confidence and judgement improve. Rework reduces because the handover points that generated it are cleaner. The high performer extends rather than narrows. The manager stops absorbing what should never have reached them.

The cost does not just stop compounding. It starts reversing.

Start Here

If this reflects what you are seeing

The first conversation is a focused conversation. We want to understand whether what you are experiencing has the pattern we recognise, and what a sensible first step would look like.

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