Andrea Belk Olson headshot

The Tragedy of the Business Commons

Listen to this article

A widely known term, at least in academia, is “the tragedy of the commons.” The term “commons” describes a resource that everyone can use at no cost, such as air. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School Lawrence Lessig explains that the tragedy is that when there is a limited amount of a commons, the competition over it causes its depletion because people work out of self-interest, whereas if they were considerate, everyone would have enough.

This doesn’t just apply to natural resources. It happens in business, too. It often starts with small things. For example, employees can walk by an unstable door latch and ignore it for weeks without getting a screwdriver and tightening the screws or reporting it to someone so it doesn’t break. When asked why it wasn’t reported, they might say, “It’s not my job” or “I didn’t think I was supposed to touch it.” It’s not even that they’re being negligent or insincere. They genuinely feel it is not their responsibility or their right to deal with anything other than the specifics of their job.

It also manifests in bigger ways, that impact the health of the company overall. Consider how departments utilize budgets because the policy is “use it or lose it”. Or consume internal resources on department-specific projects and activities, rather than sharing those resources so another team can accomplish their goals. We frequently operate in a mindset of self-interest, where our team, department, or group will compete for limited “commons”, even if it’s to the detriment of the company’s big picture needs.

There are usually two reasons why this occurs. First is incentives and culture. If a team’s success is measured solely on what they and they alone accomplish, their incentive to help others is diminished. This fosters internal rivalry for resources and gamesmanship where one department consistently claims its needs are more important than others in the organization. Second is the lack of common goals. While departments have activities they need to accomplish independently, they must tie directly to the bigger picture objectives of the organization. More importantly, everyone in the organization must understand how they connect.

For example, getting a marketing campaign launched, or upgrading an old software platform are important components of an individual department’s function. But the marketing campaign and the software upgrade by themselves don’t achieve the bigger objectives of the organization. Those bigger objectives, such as increasing revenue or reducing costs – the department activities are only a means to reach them. And the diversity of those activities – the combination of the right activities – is what truly achieves the organization’s objectives. Only marketing campaigns or only software upgrades won’t make it happen. But in the concept of “tragedy of the business commons”, departments inherently try to consume more and more organizational resources for their area, expanding their scope and influence further and further until it becomes the dominant function in the company.

This isn’t a mark of success. It’s a sign of overconsumption of the “commons” and not considering the resources of the organization in the context of its bigger goal – growth, and survival. Think about a department in your own organization that’s overgrown its space – that becomes the center of company gravity, where it consumes a preponderance of resources and unintentionally kills the productivity of other departments. While this happens frequently, it shouldn’t.

Remember that the tragedy of the business commons is that there’s a finite amount of organizational resources and bandwidth to make the company flourish. And the objective isn’t to consume it but to share and leverage it for the best outcomes for the company. Otherwise, you may not have a company (or planet) that will survive.

About the Author:

Andrea Belk Olson is a keynote speaker, author, differentiation strategist, behavioral scientist, and customer-centricity expert. As the CEO of Pragmadik, she helps organizations of all sizes, from small businesses to Fortune 500, and has served as an outside consultant for EY and McKinsey. Andrea is the author of The Customer Mission: Why it’s time to cut the $*&% and get back to the business of understanding customers, No Disruptions: The future for mid-market manufacturing, and her upcoming book, What To Ask, coming in June 2022.

She is a 4-time ADDY® award winner and host of the popular Customer Mission podcast. Her thoughts have been continually featured in news sources such as Chief Executive MagazineEntrepreneur MagazineHarvard Business Review, Rotman Magazine, and more. Andrea is a sought-after speaker at conferences and corporate events throughout the world. She is a visiting lecturer and startup coach at the University of Iowa, a TEDx presenter, and TEDx speaker coach. She is also an instructor at the University of Iowa Venture School.

More information is also available on www.pragmadik.com and www.andreabelkolson.com.

Magazine & eNewsletter

Printed Monthly Magazine

Published monthly, Material Handling Wholesaler offers feature columns and special coverage of relevant industry issues and products.

Digital Monthly Magazine

Published on the fourth Thursday of each month, Material Handling Wholesaler offers feature columns and special coverage of relevant industry issues and products.

Material Handing Wholesaler Weekly Newsletter

Our Weekly newsletter is emailed every Tuesday and contains the latest Industry Events and People News, Source Directory, and important Industry Links.

Forklift International Weekly Hot Sheet Newsletter

Published every Monday morning with the latest material handling equipment
available for sale.

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Our Current Issue

Magazine & eNewsletter

Our magazine is published and mailed monthly, Material Handling Wholesaler offers feature columns and special coverage of important industry issues. 

Weekly Newsletter – Get the latest industry events and people news in this weekly e-newsletter as well as direct access to Wholesaler’s Source Directory and link.

Current Supplements







Arnold Magnetic Technologies highlights the PLASTIFORM® High Energy Flexible Magnets, Made in America

Listen to this article Arnold Magnetic Technologies Corporation (Arnold), a subsidiary of Compass Diversified and a global manufacturer of high-performance…

Plezia named Port of Long Beach Engineering Managing Director

Listen to this article The Port of Long Beach has promoted Suzanne Plezia, P.E., to Managing Director of Engineering Services…

Ati Motors introduces the Sherpa 10K: High-capacity Autonomous Tug designed for demanding industrial workflows

Listen to this article New heavy-duty vehicle sets a new standard for autonomous material movement Ati Motors, a global provider…

Gebrüder Weiss renews scholarship program for Rutgers Business School

Listen to this article Gabriel Godoi De Lima, Jun Pak, and Nikhil Walia are 2025 scholarship recipients  Gebrüder Weiss has announced…

NY/NJ Foreign Freight Forwarders & Brokers Association Announces 2025 “Captain of Industry” Award Recipient

Listen to this article Charlene Riley to be Honored at June 25th Dinner Cruise Co-Hosted with the Traffic Club of…