The Expensive Fiction of One-Size-Fits-All Software
Tatiana’s fingers hover over the trackpad, paralyzed by a “Getting Started” guide that feels like it was written for a version of her life that doesn’t exist. She’s currently force-quitting a project management application for the 15th time this hour because it keeps trying to sync a “team calendar” she didn’t ask for and can’t disable.
Her shop-a space filled with the scent of cedar and the fine, pervasive dust of a working woodshop-is her entire world. She doesn’t have a “Head of Operations.” She doesn’t have “Stakeholders.” She has a band saw, a ledger that smells like linseed oil, and a growing suspicion that the people who built this software have never actually met someone who works with their hands.
The structural gap between the tactile reality of the user and the digital assumptions of the builder.
The landing page promised “Universal Utility.” It shouted from the digital rooftops that this tool was for everyone-from the freelance poet to the global logistics firm. But as Tatiana stares at a dashboard filled with empty widgets for “Internal Slack Integration” and “Agile Sprint Planning,” she realizes she’s been lied to.
It’s a polite lie, the kind we tell in the tech industry to keep the top of the funnel as wide as possible, but it’s a lie