The air in the conference room is exactly 69 degrees. I can feel the chill settling on my knuckles, making them feel brittle as I grip the edge of the mahogany-veneer table. Across from me, Sarah-my manager, who is generally a very kind person but currently acting as a mouthpiece for a machine she didn’t build-is pointing at a spreadsheet. It is a masterpiece of bureaucratic art. There are 49 rows, color-coded in various shades of pastel that suggest a tranquility I do not feel. Each row is a ‘competency.’ Each competency is a gate. And I, apparently, am standing on the wrong side of several of them.
It is the homogenization of talent, a slow-motion sanding down of the very edges that make a person exceptional.
The Philosophy of Spikes
My friend Hiroshi P. understands this frustration better than anyone. Hiroshi is a food stylist. If you’ve ever seen a burger in a magazine that looked so juicy it felt like a personal insult, Hiroshi probably used a blowtorch and a set of surgical tweezers on it. He is a man of singular, obsessive focus. He once spent 199 minutes adjusting the placement of three sesame seeds on a bun. He doesn’t want to manage people. He wants to make the perfect burger.
Hiroshi’s Spectrum
His life organized by HEX code, contrasting the matrix.
He has ‘spiky’ expertise. He is a 10 in one thing and a 0 in 19 others. And in a world that wasn’t obsessed with the competency matrix, that would be enough. But the matrix hates spikes. The matrix loves a smooth, predictable circle.
The Geometry of Talent
Rolls easily, predictable, fits any box. Lacks cutting edge.
Sharp edges, innovative, cuts through the status quo.
The Misguided Trade-Off
I remember a time, about 39 months ago, when I decided to play the game. I joined the ‘Culture Committee.’ I spent 19 hours a week in meetings discussing the optimal placement of the snack bar and how to phrase an all-hands email so that nobody felt excluded. I became, by all accounts, a Level 4 in ‘Organizational Navigation.’ My spreadsheet turned green. I was a success.
And I was miserable. My code suffered. The ‘deep-end stuff’ that I loved, the puzzles that kept me awake until 2:09 AM with a sense of joyous obsession, started to feel like a chore. I was so busy being ‘Exceeds Expectations’ at things I hated that I lost the spark for the things I loved. I was becoming the perfect employee: a predictable, mid-level generalist who could be swapped out for any other mid-level generalist without anyone noticing a difference in the output quality. I had traded my spike for a seat at the table, and the table was boring.
This system is designed for the benefit of the organization’s risk management, not for the flourishing of the individual. A company full of spikes is hard to manage-it’s unpredictable.
We are optimizing for ‘good enough’ across the board rather than ‘exceptional’ in a few key areas.
You can’t just prune the ‘public speaking’ branch of a person without affecting the root system of their ‘creative focus.’
The Beauty of Being Specific
There is a profound beauty in choosing to be specific. In a world of mass-produced, standardized expectations, the act of being ‘spiky’ is a form of rebellion.
This is why platforms like LMK.today resonate with us-they understand that the best choices aren’t the ones pulled from a generic, one-size-fits-all list, but the ones that reflect a person’s actual, unique needs and desires. Whether you’re building a life or a registry, the standardized path is usually the most forgettable one.
Hiroshi’s $999 Victory
They didn’t want him when he was a ‘Level 2’ team player, but they’ll pay a fortune for him now that he’s a ‘Level 10’ specialist.
The matrix failed him, but his spike saved him.
There is a hidden cost to the checklist mentality. When we spend our energy fixing our weaknesses, we have no energy left to amplify our strengths. We lose the outliers. And the outliers are the ones who change the world. You think Steve Jobs would have passed a ‘Cross-functional Empathy’ assessment?
The Opportunity Cost
Energy spent leveling up mediocrity.
The Declaration of Master
I look back at Sarah. She’s still waiting for me to say yes to the committee. She’s waiting for me to agree to grind down my edges so I can fit into the Level 5 box. But I look at the color-coded spreadsheet and all I see is a map to nowhere. It’s a guide on how to be exactly like everyone else.
“Sarah,” I say, and my voice feels steadier than it has in months. “I’m not going to join the committee. In fact, I think I’m going to spend even more time on the architecture. I want to see if I can save us 299 hours next quarter. If that means I stay at Level 4 for the rest of my life, I’m okay with that. I’d rather be a master of my craft than a manager of my mediocrity.”
She looks confused. The matrix doesn’t have a cell for ‘Refusal to Conform.’ It doesn’t know what to do with someone who doesn’t want the promotion if it costs them their soul. But as I walk out of that 69-degree room, I feel a warmth I haven’t felt in a long time. My edges are still sharp. My focus is still narrow. And for the first time in 99 days, I know exactly who I am.
A circle is just a polygon with too many compromises.
I’ll stay a triangle.
It’s much better for cutting through the noise.
