The Heavy Stack Trap — and the Serious Business Signal Nobody Mentions
The smoke alarm is still chirping in the hallway and the smell of burnt rice is thick enough to chew. I let the pan sit in the sink with a layer of grey water over the black crust because I am too tired to scrub it right now.
The call ran long and the guy on the other end wanted to talk about scalability and he wanted to talk about future-proofing and he wanted to talk about a stack that could support a thousand users even though he only employs 14 people in a small office in Ohio. He wants the weight and he wants the heaviness of a massive contract because he thinks the heaviness makes his firm look like a giant and he thinks the complexity is a badge of honor.
He is wrong and he is also the reason I am eating a piece of cold toast for dinner instead of the risotto I planned. My kitchen is a mess and my head hurts and I am thinking about how we have reached a point where we judge a business by the size of its software bill instead of what it actually does.
The Optical Illusion of Enterprise Grade
We look at two companies and we see one