People don’t bother with understanding. Really, they don’t. When I tweet something like “Maybe it’s…
My home desk is a mess. When I look around me I see books, magazines, invoices, glasses, a hideous little white Christmas tree from three months ago, speakers, external hard drives, two calculators, a scanner, a printer, post-it notes, medicines, business cards, pencils, pens, color markers, a ruler, batteries, and there’s even an acorn (from Kiev) and a chestnut (from Helsinki). My desk at the office looks more or less the same, except for the acorn and the chestnut. And the messier my desk is, the messier it gets. After all, with a loaded desktop nobody will notice when I throw another pinecone on it.
In his book The Tipping Point Malcolm Gladwell described how the New York police was able to reduce crime rates in the city by relentlessly targeting small offenses, like graffiti on walls, subway fare evasion, and public drinking. The idea of “zero tolerance” was based on the Broken Windows theory, which says that signs of disorderly and petty criminal behavior trigger more disorderly and criminal behavior, thus causing the behavior to spread. By punishing all the little ways in which people make a mess of their environment, and cleaning things up frequently, it is believed that more serious crimes can be prevented.
Social psychologists and police officers tend to agree that if a window in a building is broken and is left unrepaired, all the rest of the windows will soon be broken. This is as true in nice neighborhoods as in run-down ones. Window-breaking does not necessarily occur on a large scale because some areas are inhabited by determined window-breakers whereas others are populated by window-lovers; rather, one unrepaired broken window is a signal that no one cares, and so breaking more windows costs nothing. "Broken Windows" – James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling
A number of scholars have criticized the Broken Windows theory. They have found issues with correlation and causality, which may have led to fallacies in case studies like the famous New York city crime rate example. However, there is sufficient evidence that at least the principle behind the Broken Windows theory is sound. The theory is also a logical extension of a more generic idea, called Lewin’s Equation:
B = f(P,E)
This equation, developed by psychologist Kurt Lewin, states that behavior is a function of the person and his or her environment. Or in other words, people tend to adapt their behavior to the environment that they live in.
Given that people also copy each other’s norms and behaviors (memetics), and that therefore bad behavior is likely to lead to more bad behavior (positive feedback loop), it is easy to see how all these concepts combined automatically lead to the Broken Windows theory.
But what can we learn from this? In my opinion, two things:
Address the small problems first, and you'll have less work when addressing the big ones.
(photo: Shoes on Wires)
This article will be part of the book Management 3.0: Leading Agile Developers, Developing Agile Leaders. You can follow its progress here.
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