§6.4 · The Mission Demands Recovery
Recovery Creates Room for Perspective
Halfway through the book, and at a chapter all about recovery, it’s worth pausing on something that too often gets misunderstood or misused in product work: diversity as a design principle.
The acronym DEI has been politicized and weaponized. The principle behind it is older than the acronym, and more useful than the politics. Because the enemy of clarity isn’t chaos. It’s assumption. And when your product is only shaped by people who already know how to use it, you stop seeing what’s broken.
Think about the average enterprise tool. Bloated. Confusing. Clunky. Not because the teams behind them don’t care, but because they’ve learned to work around the flaws. They stop noticing friction because they’ve internalized the shortcuts. And then they add more complexity without questioning the base layer. That’s not innovation. That’s calcification.
Remember Apple’s infamous iPhone 4 moment? When reception dropped if the device was held a certain way, the official response was: “You’re holding it wrong.” That wasn’t just a PR misstep. It was a failure of empathy. A product built with a single use case in mind, and a team unwilling to question it.
This is where diverse inputs become a design discipline. Not a slogan. Not a checkbox. An actual practice. When you bring in voices that don’t match your defaults — different backgrounds, different abilities, different ways of thinking — you create friction that reveals blind spots. You build products that more people can actually use.
The Medici Group teaches a powerful example of this in their innovation workshops: hospitals learning from Formula 1 pit crews. Two entirely different fields — surgery and motorsport — sharing best practices to reduce patient handoff time in operating rooms. The result? Faster triage. Fewer errors. Lives saved. That’s what happens when you step outside your bubble and let diversity expand your playbook.
And sometimes, that kind of inclusion is quieter, but just as critical.
Respect the Pauses
Diversity comes in many forms, including language. At Elastic, where teams span the globe, English is the default for most business communication, but it’s not the first language for many Elasticians. That matters more than most people realize.
In a leadership training, one of our engineering leaders walked the room through what happens cognitively when you’re a non-native English speaker in a fast-moving meeting. You listen. You process. You translate. You form a thought. You translate again to respond. That’s not delay. That’s effort. And if you interrupt the pause where that work happens, you erase the contribution before it can surface.
Respecting the pause allows full participation. It gives space not just for language translation, but for different processing styles, communication rhythms, neurodiversity, and accessibility needs.
Internally, we called it the curb-cut effect. Curb ramps were designed for wheelchairs. But now they help everyone — people with strollers, luggage, bikes, injuries. What was built for access became a better default for all.
Respecting the pause works the same way. It’s a small behavior that opens the door to a much wider room.