It was a sentence about ‘strategic alignment,’ a phrase that sounds like poetry to a middle manager but feels like a slow-motion car crash to anyone trying to actually build something. I looked at Avery R.J., a typeface designer whose eyes were currently tracking the microscopic jitter of a cursor. Avery was trying to explain, for the 15th time, why the descender on the lowercase ‘g’ needed to remain at that specific 15-degree angle. Across the table sat 5 people whose primary job was to have ‘concerns.’ They weren’t designers. They weren’t typographers. They were professional seekers of consensus, and they were currently dismantling a year of work in favor of a compromise that would make nobody happy and everyone safe.
Consensus is the graveyard where great ideas go to be buried in shallow, unmarked graves.
The Diffusion of Responsibility
We are currently obsessed with the ‘buy-in.’ We treat it like a holy sacrament of the modern workplace. If we don’t have 100% agreement, we don’t move. We host 45-minute stand-ups that turn into 125-minute therapy sessions where every stakeholder’s ego must be gently massaged until they feel they’ve ‘contributed.’ But here’s the reality we don’t talk about while we’re sipping our lukewarm lattes: the corporate obsession with consensus isn’t about making better decisions. It’s about the diffusion of responsibility. If 25 people sign off on a project and it fails, no one gets fired. You can’t fire a committee. You can’t blame a ‘process.’ Consensus is the ultimate shield for the careerist who is terrified of leadership.
The Soul-Less Typeface
Avery R.J. knows this better than most. Avery spent 85 days crafting a bespoke typeface for a global logistics firm. The goal was clarity, speed, and a certain industrial elegance. But then the ‘Buy-In Phase’ began. It started with a marketing director who thought the font was ‘too confident.’ Then came the legal department, who wondered if the kerning between the letters ‘L’ and ‘A’ might somehow imply a liability. By the time 35 different people had offered their ‘just one small thought,’ the typeface looked like it had been chewed by a dog and then smoothed over with a rolling pin. It was legible, yes, but it was soul-less. It was the visual equivalent of white bread: safe, expected, and entirely forgettable.
Visionary Design
Safe Compromise
The Cost of Apology
I’ve made this mistake myself. Once, I spent 55 hours preparing a proposal that I knew was the right direction for a client. But instead of presenting it as the solution, I presented it as a ‘starting point for discussion.’ I invited the committee in. I practically begged for their buy-in. What I got was a 65-page document of conflicting feedback that led to a 25% decrease in the project’s overall effectiveness. I apologized for things I knew were correct because I wanted the ‘harmony’ of the group. I prioritized the comfort of the room over the courage of the work. It’s a specific kind of exhaustion-the exhaustion of pretending that everyone’s opinion is equally valid in a room where only one person has done the actual work.
Impact of Consensus on Effectiveness
(25% Effectiveness Loss due to compromise)
Expertise Is Not a Democracy
When we demand buy-in for every micro-decision, we are essentially saying that we don’t trust our experts. We hired Avery R.J. because they are one of the best typeface designers in the country, yet we treat their professional judgment as a suggestion that is subject to the whims of a project manager who once read a blog post about ‘clean design.’ It’s an insult to the craft. Expertise isn’t a democracy. You don’t vote on the structural integrity of a bridge, and you shouldn’t vote on the core elements of a brand’s identity or product development. True leadership involves the terrifying act of saying: ‘This is the way, because I am the expert you hired, and I am taking the risk.’
In the world of product creation, this committee-driven paralysis is particularly toxic. […] They lead with the product, not with a poll.
– Contextual Note on Premium Craftsmanship
In the world of product creation, this committee-driven paralysis is particularly toxic. When you are building something that people are actually going to use, touch, or consume, the details matter in a way that ‘consensus’ can never capture. A committee will always choose the safest option, but the safest option is rarely the best one. The best things-the things that actually resonate with people on a visceral level-usually come from a singular vision that was protected from the watering-down effect of too many opinions. This is exactly why brands like Flav Edibles focus so heavily on the precision of their product development; they understand that you can’t create a premium experience if you’re constantly checking for the ‘buy-in’ of people who don’t understand the chemistry or the craft.
The Snap Point: Protecting the Work
I remember watching Avery finally snap during a meeting about the letter ‘S.’ The client wanted it to be ‘friendlier.’ Avery leaned forward, the blue light of the projector casting a 45-degree shadow across their face, and said, ‘The letter S isn’t your friend. It’s a functional component of a linguistic system. If you want a friend, buy a dog. If you want a typeface that works at 5-point size on a shipping label, let me finish the work.’ The room went silent for about 15 seconds. It was uncomfortable. It was tense. It was the most honest thing that had been said in 5 weeks. And you know what happened? They let Avery finish the work. And it was brilliant.
The Warning Signal
The most dangerous phrase in business is ‘What does everyone think?’
Courage Over Comfort
We use that phrase as a crutch. We use it when we’re scared of being the one who makes the wrong call. But if you’re not willing to be wrong, you’re never going to be remarkably right. The exhaustion of the buy-in culture comes from the constant performance of agreement. It’s the nodding of heads in a 25-person Zoom call while everyone is secretly checking their 75 unread messages. It’s a waste of human potential. We are spending 85% of our time talking about the work and only 15% of our work actually doing it.
Time Allocation: Talk vs. Do
85%
TALKING
15%
DOING
I’ve realized that my own frustration stems from a desire to be liked. I wanted the buy-in because I wanted the validation. I wanted everyone to pat me on the back and tell me I was a ‘team player.’ But being a team player shouldn’t mean being a doormat for mediocrity. It should mean holding the team to a standard that is higher than their collective comfort zone. It means being willing to be the ‘difficult’ person in the room who says ‘no’ to a bad idea, even if that idea has 105 supporters.
The Alternative: Earning the Followership
Think about the last time you saw something truly extraordinary. Was it made by a committee? Was it the result of 25 rounds of feedback and 5 levels of managerial approval? Probably not. It was likely the result of someone-an Avery R.J., a chef, a coder, a writer-who had a vision and the stubbornness to see it through despite the ‘concerns’ of the crowd. They didn’t seek buy-in; they earned it by creating something so undeniably good that the skeptics had no choice but to follow.
I look back at the 35 years I’ve spent navigating these systems, and the moments I regret are never the times I stood my ground. They are the times I gave in. They are the times I let a committee of 15 people turn a sharp, vibrant idea into a dull, grey smudge just so we could all leave the meeting by 4:55 PM. We are so afraid of the conflict that comes with expertise that we have sacrificed the quality of our output on the altar of the ‘check-in.’
The Final Reckoning
Are you building something that requires courage, or are you just building a consensus? Because you can’t do both. The moment you start optimizing for everyone’s approval is the moment you stop optimizing for excellence. It’s a hard truth to swallow, especially when your 55-page slide deck is on the line, but it’s the only truth that leads to anything worth making. Avery R.J. eventually finished that font. It didn’t have the ‘friendly’ S. It had the right S. And when the company’s revenue increased by 25% following the rebrand, nobody mentioned their ‘small concerns’ ever again.
(The evidence that silences critics)
If you want to create something that lasts, you have to be willing to be the only person in the room who sees it clearly. You have to be willing to exhaust yourself on the craft, not on the persuasion. After all, if the work is good enough, the buy-in will take care of itself. If it isn’t, no amount of meetings will save it. So, why are we still sitting here talking about it?