Cognitive overload in technical organizations costs roughly $322 billion a year in lost productivity. That's the finding from a 2024 IT Revolution piece by an organizational psychologist and a team topology expert, scoped specifically to technical organizations and presented at the Enterprise Technology Leadership Summit. The cause isn't lazy employees. It's a misunderstanding of what a team's cognitive capacity actually is.
Stop Counting
Laggards.
Start Counting
Bandwidth.
The person who didn't adopt the tool isn't dragging the rollout. They're carrying a cognitive bill the rollout never accounted for. The "laggard" label is a misdiagnosis that protects the architecture and blames the host.
Bandwidth isn't infinite. The brain has a budget. Most adoption plans treat that budget like it doesn't exist, then file the receipt under "change resistance" when the worker can't pay.
Throughput here means the rate at which work can flow through a system. Every system has a ceiling, set by the slowest part. In a workflow that includes a human, the human is usually that slowest part. Not because the person is slow. The brain has a hard ceiling. The workflow rarely admits it.