Everyone agrees, everyone smiles, everyone nods. Sprint Planning is done in 30 minutes, the retrospective in 15. “Great, let’s move on!”
Congratulations—you’ve created a corporate version of a family dinner where nobody argues. On the surface everything looks fine, everyone nods along, and decisions are made quickly. But the reality is harsh: this false harmony kills innovation, critical thinking, and any chance of truly breakthrough solutions.
Real teams argue—not personally, but about ideas. Introverts often have the best solutions, but wait until everyone else has finished talking. Juniors spot mistakes that seniors no longer notice. Yet we stay quiet—because we don’t want to ruin the “good atmosphere.”
A question for you: When was the last time you changed your mind during a team discussion?
The most dangerous thing isn’t bad ideas. The most dangerous thing is believing that all the good ideas are already on the table.
