Slow is Smooth, Smooth is Fast
Nearly a decade ago, a product manager told me about the phrase "Slow is smooth, smooth is fast." It's a military motto that refers to how elite forces traverse ground and infiltrate enemy lines. The premise is that a deliberate and highly coordinated series of interconnected movements is significantly more effective and fast than an all-out storm the battlefield approach. While the former seems to move at a relatively slow clip, it is actually meaningfully faster than any alternative because of its meticulous movement.
This concept can be applied to doing things inside a company. Working with other people and being highly aligned and moving as one is a smooth way to do things. The coordination costs may be high, but the motion is smooth, and when you look back at the end of the day it's a hell of a lot faster than people flailing independently at warp speed.
Stylistically, it's also applicable at the individual level. My son is dyslexic, and he has a tendency to read through text as quickly as possible. This sometimes results in him reading a word like "turn" as "run" which can completely change the meaning of a sentence to the point it is nonsensical. The thing I tell him is that slow is smooth and smooth is fast. It's easier, more effective, and leads to better comprehension if you just take a beat as you flow through things. It's a really hard thing to do when we are wired to run.
Yesterday, I read an incredible article called AI 2027. I highly recommend taking your time and reading it. It goes through a variety of different scenarios about how the development and integration of AI into our world can and will unfold over the next several years. It reads like science fiction, and any prognostication of this sort has a tinge of fantasy, but it certainly feels quite real (Josh Wolfe likes to say sci-fi is becoming sci-fact and I believe that to be true at an accelerating rate). The outcomes range from utopian to armageddon, and the thing that determines where on that spectrum we end up is how deliberate we are along the way.
Rest of the blog post is in the link in the comments...