Structural vs. Superficial

Most leaders confuse activity with progress. We spend our days firefighting and wonder why the fires keep starting. It is easy to feel productive when your calendar is full, but being busy is often a trap that keeps you from being effective.

In the movie Jumanji, there is a famous scene where an invasive vine tears through the walls of a family home. The characters could have spent their lives pruning those leaves or scrubbing the floors, but the house would have still collapsed. They understood the weeds were not the real problem. They were a symptom of the game itself. To save the house, they had to finish the game.

I see this same pattern in business every day. Most leaders are expertly pruning weeds. They obsess over superficial issues like minor fluctuations in weekly engagement or individual friction. These feel urgent, but they are usually distractions from a structural root cause. Research into systems thinking suggests that the vast majority of performance issues are tied to the system itself, rather than the individuals within it.

It’s actually refreshingly easy to fix most problems, but the hardest part is most people are focusing on the wrong problems. Superficial problems are much easier to spot, and much easier to “fix” quickly. But we tend to find glory in overworking ourselves. Often times the challenges in a business, relationship, or society comes down to 1-2 very simple core structural issues.

The true work of a leader is finding the one structural issue that solves five hundred superficial ones. It is the difference between mopping a puddle and fixing the leak in the roof. If you are chasing a hundred different problems, you are likely ignoring the one lever that would make them all vanish.

I learned this while scaling companies in enterprise SaaS and consumer web. When I was at one high growth company, we surpassed 100M in annual recurring revenue with less than 100 people. We achieved that growth by maintaining a relentless focus on structures and frameworks. We did not waste time on the superficial politics of needing more headcount or budget. When the structure is sound, the weeds of communication silos never have a chance to take root.

Investors must be just as disciplined about this distinction. I look for this when I evaluate opportunities like Tesla or Slack, where I was an early investor. People often focus on the superficial noise of a single quarterly report. The real value is the structural advantage. For Tesla, it was the shift to a direct-to-consumer model. That one structural choice solved thousands of problems that have plagued traditional auto dealers for decades.

If you find yourself constantly in reactive mode, you are likely ignoring a structural issue. You are trading your most valuable commodity, which is your time, for temporary fixes.

True leadership is about having the courage to stop the busy work and fix the foundation. Once you solve the structural root cause, you gain the freedom to focus on what actually matters.

That is how you build a legacy that is uniquely yours.