> It's really hard to describe why it's inevitable (there are a lot of factors).
I think there's a lot of small factors, but of those the biggest on (IMO) is the fallacy that throwing people at a problem gets it done faster. For some situations: yes, for all situations: no. And you need experience or some kind of sharp intuition to know when to expand and when not to expand.
Add more and more people to a job and they'll find ways to justify their value at the expense of efficiency. And there's a snowball effect from there as an org adds people who believe adding people is always good.
Then the corpo runs into layoffs and everyone throws their hands up and says "How could we have avoided this?" By not overhiring in the first place.
I think there's a lot of small factors, but of those the biggest on (IMO) is the fallacy that throwing people at a problem gets it done faster. For some situations: yes, for all situations: no. And you need experience or some kind of sharp intuition to know when to expand and when not to expand.
Add more and more people to a job and they'll find ways to justify their value at the expense of efficiency. And there's a snowball effect from there as an org adds people who believe adding people is always good.
Then the corpo runs into layoffs and everyone throws their hands up and says "How could we have avoided this?" By not overhiring in the first place.
(All IMO naturally.)