Cognition in the flotilla
Weeknote, w/c 11 August 2025
When people in the NHS discuss strategy, tactics, and how hard it is to change the current direction of travel, you often here phrases such as “its like trying to turn an oil tanker”, but that analogy has never sat particularly well with me. Earlier this week, Steve Messer wrote a thing that gets so much closer to what reality feels like. It is hard to reference his post without quoting nearly the whole thing, but here’s the most salient bit, logged for future reference:
Regardless of how many people are on your boat or how big it is, you need one hand on the tiller.
That doesn’t mean one person calling all the shots. Captains will listen to their crew and get feedback on the prevailing conditions. They use that information to adjust the course and turn the tiller.
[...]
Being a leader in today’s world is more like being an admiral: having influence over several boats rather than being on every one. Clear direction, clear decisions, and clear coordination.
Many hands, many tillers.
My situation is probably more akin to whatever you call the ninth in command of a small flotilla, itself part of a much greater fleet.
With contemporary, product-led ways of working, where each team is meant to be empowered and autonomous and agile and whathaveyou, trying to produce something that looks like coordinated action across a flotilla or fleet is a bizarre experience. You’ve got teams and clusters and programmes and portfolios and directorates all trying to play their part, but in the public sector you operate amidst nearly constant changes in the direction of the wind, the choppiness of the water, and the amount of cloud cover. Things tend to get blown all over the place and before you know it: mess, entropy, sunken ships.
By happy accident, I’m currently reading Cognition in the Wild by Edwin Hutchins, which, get ready: is about distributed decision making (on boats). I’m only half-way through but thus far the key concept is that, taken together, people and rules and objects can comprise a cognitive system that can be said to have its own computational power. We’re wading into actor-network theory, and going back to Steve’s post, might we think of the fleet itself as a thinking entity?
I continue trying to keep the big difficult project moving forward. This work isn’t on our public roadmap yet and it isn’t about AI or the Single Patient Record, but in my estimation it is really very important. It is also an absolute slog. If we do manage to make the thing happen, I’m not sure how much energy I’m going to have left to actually work on it.
Much of my energy right now is focussed on devising a plan for how to approach the topic, which involves identifying who should work on it, under what guidelines, and with what means. Sound familiar? Per Edwin Hutchins, it is about establishing a cognitive system – a thinking machine – by assembling and arranging the elements of a collective.
Amongst my cohort of lead designers in NHS England, we’ve discussed weeknotes and blogging a little this week. More and more people across the org are writing about their work on the internet, which is great. Between Caroline and Frankie and Irina and James and Joe and Kathryn and Matt and Max and Micol and Ralph and Rebecca and Rochelle and Sarah and Sarah and Tero and Tom and Trilly and Vero (and probably people I’ve missed; sorry!) it feels like we have a substantial public community developing around the work.
Design histories are part of this too, as are the Github issues where people document what they’re learning about how the NHS design system works in practice. Both are useful tools for shaping future decision making.
There is a sense of energy that comes from this collective publishing endeavour – so many people working in the open! There is also a sense of overwhelm stemming from the sheer volume of words being put out there – how on earth does one find the time to keep up with all of this? On Friday, Joe wrote about how he deals with this tension (he also referenced me and frankly I don’t know what to say other than it is extraordinarily nice). For my part, I don’t try to read every single thing right when they are published – it isn’t the news; it is enough to know that it is happening and that the material will be there when you need it. That and I use RSS religiously, off-boarding the act of keeping track to a machine.
All of these messages in their proverbial (digital) bottles are another aspect of trying to direct the fleet. Posting about our work online is an indirect method of steering, but I think the collective knowledge and learning that is captured is a hugely important part of group decision making. This corpus of material is another element of the cognitive system that makes up design in the public sector, multiplying and connecting the hands and the tillers.
(How’s that for torturing an analogy?)