CONCEPT
The Organization's Cognitive Debt
The liability an organization accumulates when it deploys powerful tools without designing the structures that make their use sustainable — visible in no line item, tracked by no metric, until the accumulated debt produces a failure dramatic enough to command attention.
Cognitive debt is the simulation's extension of Perlow's framework into financial vocabulary. An organization that deploys AI tools without designing for recovery is borrowing against its workers' future cognitive capacity to fund current output. The borrowing produces impressive results in the present — more features shipped, more analyses delivered, more products launched. The obligation it creates — degraded judgment, diminished creativity, eroded capacity for the deep engagement that produces the organization's most valuable work — accumulates invisibly, serviced by no payment, tracked by no metric, until the accumulated debt produces a failure dramatic enough to command attention. Unlike financial debt, cognitive debt has no balance sheet, no auditor, no rating agency. Its invisibility creates the condition for reckless accumulation.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The concept reframes the organizational responsibility Perlow's framework identifies. The responsibility is not primarily moral, though it is that as well. It is a performance obligation — the
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