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You have a process that is so mind-numbingly [[dreary]] — [[Citigroup v Brigade Capital Management|sequencing interest payments on billion dollar revolving credit facilities]], for example — that the posse of [[School-leaver_from_Bucharest|Bratislavan school-leavers]] you have engaged for the purpose cannot be depended on to carry it out without occasionally ticking the wrong box, whacking the wrong mole, or wiring an eight-figure principal repayment to the wrong distressed creditor.
You have a process that is so mind-numbingly [[dreary]] — [[Citigroup v Brigade Capital Management|sequencing interest payments on billion dollar revolving credit facilities]], for example — that the posse of [[School-leaver_from_Bucharest|Bratislavan school-leavers]] you have engaged for the purpose cannot be depended on to carry it out without occasionally ticking the wrong box, whacking the wrong mole, or wiring an eight-figure principal repayment to the wrong distressed creditor.


What to do? Easy: engage ''another'' squad of Balkan undergraduates for the even more soul-gouging chore of checking the output of the first lot.
What to do? Easy: engage ''another'' squad of Balkan undergraduates for the even more soul-gouging chore of checking the work product of the first lot.


Because that will definitely work, right?<ref>It won’t.</ref>
In the same way that two wrongs make a right, that will definitely work.<ref>It won’t.</ref>


The [[JC]] has moaned elsewhere about our [[modernist]] confusion over the fundamental division of labour between the [[Meatware|meatware]] and the [[Machines_are_fungible|machines]]. If you want a job being done quickly, cheaply and reliably, and it’s important, ''get a machine to do it''. If it is worth investing in not just one low-paid call centre worker to carry out the task, but two, it is certainly worth investing in a machine that can do the work without checking it.
The [[JC]] has moaned elsewhere about our [[modernist]] confusion as to the division of labour between the [[Meatware|meatware]] and the [[Machines_are_fungible|machines]]. The division is fundamental: humans are slow, expensive, inconstant, hopeless at following instructions but good at dreaming up a passable plan of action if something unpredictable happens. Machines are fast, cheap, reliable, but ''useless' at figuring out what to do if something unpredictable happens.
 
If you want a routine job done quickly, cheaply and reliably, and it’s important, ''get a machine to do it''. If it is worth investing in not just one low-paid call centre worker to carry out the task, but another one to check it, it is worth investing in a machine that can do the work without the need for anyone to checking it. If a human is your solution, ''you have your model wrong''. Oh sure, you will have someone to blame when everything blows up, but even to draw that conclusion is to have your model wrong.
 
Here is is, in short:


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Latest revision as of 16:19, 5 May 2022

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An accident waiting to happen.

You have a process that is so mind-numbingly drearysequencing interest payments on billion dollar revolving credit facilities, for example — that the posse of Bratislavan school-leavers you have engaged for the purpose cannot be depended on to carry it out without occasionally ticking the wrong box, whacking the wrong mole, or wiring an eight-figure principal repayment to the wrong distressed creditor.

What to do? Easy: engage another squad of Balkan undergraduates for the even more soul-gouging chore of checking the work product of the first lot.

In the same way that two wrongs make a right, that will definitely work.[1]

The JC has moaned elsewhere about our modernist confusion as to the division of labour between the meatware and the machines. The division is fundamental: humans are slow, expensive, inconstant, hopeless at following instructions but good at dreaming up a passable plan of action if something unpredictable happens. Machines are fast, cheap, reliable, but useless' at figuring out what to do if something unpredictable happens.

If you want a routine job done quickly, cheaply and reliably, and it’s important, get a machine to do it. If it is worth investing in not just one low-paid call centre worker to carry out the task, but another one to check it, it is worth investing in a machine that can do the work without the need for anyone to checking it. If a human is your solution, you have your model wrong. Oh sure, you will have someone to blame when everything blows up, but even to draw that conclusion is to have your model wrong.

Here is is, in short:

Decision Grid: when to use humans and when to use machines.
Easy Hard
Frequent Machine. Humans will take too long, cost too much and screw it up. Redesign process. Either separate “easy and frequent” from “hard and rare”, hire lots of subject matter experts or don’t do the business.
Rare Human. Not worth programming a computer. Human. No point programming a computer.

References

  1. It won’t.