
#47: Cut the Noise, Keep the Signal: Fixing Work Friction with Robert Sutton
World's Greatest Business Thinkers
Pilot, safe-to-fail experiments with AI
Sutton stresses piloting AI, accepting high failure rates, and scaling only successful experiments to avoid harm.
What if the biggest drain on your team's productivity isn't lack of effort, but the friction you've built into your systems?
In this episode of World's Greatest Business Thinkers, host Nick Hague speaks with Robert Sutton, Organizational Psychologist, and Professor Emeritus at Stanford, about the hidden cost of organizational friction. Robert explains how leaders can act as "friction fixers," removing bureaucratic barriers, unnecessary meetings, and email overload while preserving productive constraints that improve decision-making.
The conversation explores practical frameworks like the "subtraction game," strategies to combat performative leadership, and the importance of treating others' time as a sacred resource. With real-world examples from companies like Google, Sutton also unpacks how AI can either streamline or worsen broken systems depending on how thoughtfully it's applied.
What You Will Learn:
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How to distinguish good friction from bad friction
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The "subtraction game" framework for identifying organizational waste
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Why treating others' time as a sacred trust is the foundation of leadership
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How to combat "peacocking" and the "smart talk trap" in your organization
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The power of constraint-based rules to eliminate bad friction at scale
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Why AI is a magnifying glass for both good and bad processes
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About Guest:
Robert Sutton is an organizational psychologist and Professor Emeritus at Stanford University's School of Engineering, where he has spent over 40 years studying how organizations function at scale. Known for his bestselling books, including *The No Asshole Rule* and *The Friction Project: How Smart Leaders Make the Right Things Easier and the Wrong Things Harder*, Robert bridges the gap between academic research and real-world organizational challenges. His work focuses on creating organizations that are both humane and financially viable, examining how leaders can intentionally design systems to eliminate bad friction while preserving good friction.
Quotes:
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"Bad friction is stuff that gets in the way of doing the work you should be doing. But there are all these things that should be slower, difficult, or impossible; doing things that are unlawful should be impossible. We're interested in both good friction and bad friction, and I probably spend 80% of my time talking about bad friction."
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"Email is the killer app of the Internet in two ways: it was winning the Internet, and it was killing people. This is 2026, and there's all this software, all the AI, Slack, and all these different ways to communicate, but email remains the killer app in both senses."
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"The first step is having a leader who talks about and takes action to have people identify and talk publicly about things that are in the way that make it hard to get their work done. When a leader creates real psychological safety, it's amazing that people will get in this mindset of, 'What are we doing that could get in the way?'"
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"Peacocking is when people do things for status display so they don't actually have to do the hard work of implementing something. People will get ahead for saying smart things rather than doing things, but coming up with a plan or announcing an initiative is great; you actually have to do something."
Keywords:
Primary Keywords (Core Themes): friction management, organizational psychology, leadership strategy, workplace efficiency, bad friction vs good friction, reducing organizational friction, friction fixing, leadership in action, organizational culture, management practices
Secondary Keywords (Related Subtopics): psychological safety, bureaucratic processes, email overload, meeting efficiency, peacocking in business, smart talk trap, subtraction strategy, process improvement, organizational scaling, decision-making speed, change management, workplace innovation
Episode Resources:
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Robert Sutton on LinkedIn
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Stanford University School of Engineering Website
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World's Greatest Business Thinkers on Apple Podcasts
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World's Greatest Business Thinkers on Spotify
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World's Greatest Business Thinkers on YouTube


