This is where efficiency breaks down.
The initial change doesn’t look significant.
And once repetition locks in, efficiency multiplies.
This creates a feedback loop of efficiency.
Week 1: You start noticing less waste.
And over time, the gap between waste and efficiency widens.
They think scaling requires bigger changes.
This is how simple becomes powerful.
It turns into a structured routine.
You begin to notice how frequently waste occurs.
Second level: precision.
Patterns create systems.
But complexity often reduces adoption.
The kitchen systems that reduce waste more steps involved, the more friction increases.
You don’t add complexity—you reinforce simplicity.
What started in the kitchen becomes a mindset.
Each cycle compounds results.
Don’t add complexity—reinforce simplicity.