The Ghost in the Machine
The dry, recirculated air of the boardroom is hitting my eyes, making them itch in that specific way that only happens after 41 minutes of circular debate. I am staring at a slide deck that looks hauntingly familiar. It is a proposal for a ‘disruptive’ direct-to-consumer initiative that involves 11 different touchpoints and a budget that ends in far too many zeros. Across the table, Marcus, a Senior VP who has survived 21 different reorgs, lets out a sigh so heavy it practically rattles the glass of water in front of him. It is the sound of a man watching a ghost walk through a wall. ‘We tried that in 2021,’ he says, his voice flat. ‘It didn’t work.’
REVELATION: The Immediate Burial
And that’s it. That is the end of the inquiry. No one asks *why* it didn’t work. No one asks what the market conditions were like 31 months ago, or if the failure was a result of execution or the fundamental idea. The idea is simply marked with a red ‘X’ in the collective consciousness of the room and buried in a shallow grave. We move on to the next ‘innovative’ thought, which, if my calculations are correct, will be a recycled version of a 2011 failure by about 3:51 PM. This is the life of the corporate goldfish.
Cultural Allergy to Retrospection
“We treat the past as a landfill rather than a library. We are so obsessed with ‘velocity’ and ‘looking forward’ that we have developed a cultural allergy to the retrospective. If it failed, it is a radioactive site that must be paved over and forgotten.”
This isn’t just a quirk of office culture; it’s a systemic failure. We blame employee turnover for the loss of institutional knowledge. We say, ‘Oh, Sarah left, and she was the only one who knew how the legacy system worked.’ But that’s a convenient lie. The real culprit is the way we handle failure. In most companies, a ‘post-mortem’ is just a polite term for a blame-assignment ritual. We don’t look for the root cause; we look for the throat to choke. Because of this, everyone involved in a failed project has a vested interest in making sure that project is never mentioned again. We erase the maps of the minefields we’ve already walked through.
The Tax on Ignorance (Lessons Paid For vs. Lessons Learned)
Cost of First Lesson (2011)
Cost of Second Lesson (2021)
Survival Through Memory
Ella W.J., a woman I once met who worked as a submarine cook, understood the weight of memory better than any CEO I’ve ever interviewed. In a galley that was roughly 41 square feet, she had to remember the precise temperament of a pressure cooker that had been finicky since the sub’s 1991 commission. She told me that in a submarine, memory is survival. You don’t just ignore a valve that leaked 21 days ago because you’re ‘focusing on the future.’ You study that leak. You document the sound it made before it gave way. You respect the history of the machine because the machine is the only thing keeping the ocean from crushing you.
Submarine Galley
Memory is survival. Respect the history of the machine to avoid crushing failure.
Corporate Machine
Treated like a disposable camera. Click, done, throw away. No reflection.
A corporation is a machine too, but we treat it like a disposable camera. I’ve made this mistake myself. Once, I deleted a 201-page technical manual because I thought it was a redundant draft. It turned out to be the only record of why we chose a specific encryption protocol 11 years ago. Without that context, the new team spent 51 days trying to ‘improve’ the system, only to inadvertently create the exact security loophole the original manual warned against.
Dashboards vs. Narrative
There is a profound irony in the way we value ‘data’ while ignoring ‘history.’ We have dashboards that tell us what happened 1 second ago, but we have no narrative that tells us why we are here. This is why I find the work of certain organizations so vital. When I look at the work of a Wax figure manufacturer, I see a fundamental rebellion against this collective amnesia. They create lasting cultural assets, frozen in time with meticulous detail, ensuring that the visual and emotional weight of a moment or a person isn’t lost to the fog of the next news cycle. It is the antithesis of the corporate slide deck.
ANTITHESIS: The Commitment to Accuracy
Corporate Whiteboards
Wiped clean every Friday.
Cultural Assets
Preserved with 101% accuracy.
We’ve turned the ‘fail fast’ mantra into a license to ‘forget fast.’ But failing fast only works if you actually learn from the failure. If you fail fast and then immediately erase the memory of the failure, you aren’t an agile innovator; you’re just a person who likes running into walls.
The Cost of Silence
I remember a project from 11 years ago-let’s call it Project Icarus, because we were that subtle back then. We spent 71 days building a tool that nobody wanted. The post-mortem was a disaster… Last month, I saw a 2021 memo proposing ‘Project Daedalus.’ It was the exact same tool. Not 51% the same, but identical in every functional requirement. The company is about to spend another 111 weeks and probably $2,101,000 to realize that nobody wants this tool. The goldfish have completed another lap of the bowl.
The Recurrence Cycle
Project Icarus (11 Yrs Ago)
Documentation lost. Blame assigned. Silence enforced.
The Quiet Period
The 11 people who remembered learned silence is safer.
Project Daedalus (Now)
Identical tool, new budget, new timeline (111 weeks).
The Rudder of History
[The past is not a weight; it is a rudder.]
– Marcus needs a different follow-up question.
The Path to Day 21
When Marcus says, ‘We tried that in 2021,’ the next question shouldn’t be ‘What’s next?’ It should be: ‘How exactly did it fail, and what would have to be different now for it to succeed?’
Until we do that, we are just burning capital to fuel a time machine that only goes in circles. We are $111 billion worth of collective intelligence acting with the wisdom of a 1-year-old. We keep reaching for the same hot stove, wondering why it burns every time. The memory of a company isn’t stored in its databases; it’s stored in its willingness to be honest about its own scars. If we keep hiding the scars, we’ll never learn how to stop getting hurt. I’ll take the submarine cook’s approach any day. If we want to build something that lasts, we have to start by remembering why the last thing we built fell down.
The Corporate Memory Imperatives
Question Failure
Demand the mechanism, not just the outcome.
Value Manuals
History is truth; treat archives as sacred text.
Embrace Scars
Scars map the boundaries of danger; hide them at your peril.