There’s always something happening. Meetings stack on meetings. Reorgs reshuffle the same people into slightly different boxes. Strategy shifts get announced with new language, new decks, new urgency. From the outside, it looks like momentum. Inside, it often feels like motion without movement.
You start to notice a pattern. The calendar stays full, the conversations keep going, and the updates keep coming. There’s a constant sense that something important is happening just around the corner. But when you zoom out, the outcomes rarely match the energy being spent. The same problems resurface under different names. The same decisions get revisited months later. The same gaps get reframed instead of actually being closed.
It’s not a lack of effort. People are working hard. Long hours, real commitment, genuine care. The problem is where that effort goes. In large organizations, a lot of energy gets absorbed by the system itself. Alignment meetings to prepare for meetings. Reviews to prepare for approvals. Messaging to explain why something hasn’t moved yet. Over time, the process becomes the work.
Reorgs are one of the clearest examples. They come in with the promise of clarity, speed, and a fresh start. And for a moment, it feels like progress. New roles, new reporting lines, new expectations. But if the underlying issues aren’t addressed—unclear direction, misaligned leadership, competing priorities—the same friction shows up again. Just in a different shape. Just with a different name.
Strategy shifts follow a similar pattern. A new direction gets defined, often with the right intentions. But instead of simplifying execution, it adds another layer to navigate. Teams pause to realign. Projects get re-scoped. Momentum slows while everyone recalibrates. By the time things start moving again, another shift is already on the horizon.
Over time, organizations get very good at signaling progress. Slide decks improve. Language gets sharper. Updates sound more confident. But signaling progress and making progress are not the same thing. One creates the appearance of movement. The other creates actual change.
Real progress is quieter. It doesn’t need constant rebranding or a new org chart to prove it exists. It shows up in decisions that stick. Problems that stay solved. Teams that can move forward without needing to check in at every layer. It feels less like noise and more like direction.
And once you see the difference, it’s hard to unsee it. Motion feels productive in the moment. It fills the day, gives a sense of purpose, keeps everything in play. But progress is what holds up over time. It compounds. It builds. It leaves something behind that doesn’t need to be revisited every quarter.
In big organizations, confusing the two is easy. Sometimes it’s even encouraged. Because motion is visible. It’s measurable. It looks good in updates. Progress, on the other hand, takes longer. It requires focus, consistency, and often a willingness to do less, not more.
The challenge isn’t working harder. It’s being honest about what’s actually moving the needle. Because at some point, you have to ask the question: are we moving forward, or just staying in motion?
