Author: Maria

  • Edition 3: The Levarage Edition

    Edition 3: The Levarage Edition

    Dear Reader,

    Most people think progress comes from doing more.

    More output. More ideas. More tools. More effort applied with increasing urgency.

    It looks convincing. It rarely works.

    This edition of Postnoted is about leverage.

    Not the loud, obvious kind.

    The quieter version. The kind that shows up in small decisions that change everything that follows.

    It’s for people who have noticed that working harder is no longer the answer.

    And are ready to be more precise instead.

    Inside, you’ll find thinking that doesn’t try to impress you.

    It helps you see where you’re wasting effort, and where a single shift would do more.

    Frameworks that show why momentum often hides poor decisions.

    Stories that reveal how small misjudgements compound into large problems.

    Arguments that challenge the idea that more activity equals more progress.

    And practical ways to step back, rethink, and move differently.

    This is not about optimisation.

    It’s about choosing better.

    Because leverage doesn’t reward speed.

    It rewards clarity.

    And most people are moving too fast to see it.

    Inside this edition

    Why the smartest move is often to pause

    Not hesitation. Precision. The difference between reacting and deciding.

    The illusion of momentum

    When progress feels real, but nothing meaningful is changing.

    Create less. Curate more

    Why your best work is already done, and why most people can’t see it.

    The hidden weight of small decisions

    The choices that don’t look important, until they are.

    Why experts struggle to scale their thinking

    Not lack of knowledge. Lack of visibility into their own method.

    The cost of solving the wrong problem well

    And how it quietly compounds over time.

    Where leverage actually lives

    Not in effort. In placement.

    And the question running underneath it all

    What are you doing that feels productive, but isn’t?

    This is not a magazine you skim.

    It’s one you return to when something isn’t working,

    And you suspect the problem isn’t effort.

    Its direction.

    Noise is easy.

    Leverage is precise.

    This edition is a collection of it.

    Warmly,

    Debbie Jenkins

    Publisher & Strategic Editor, Postnoted.com

    Contributors: contact us for multiple contributor-priced copies

  • Edition 2: Strategic Signal

    Edition 2: Strategic Signal

    Dear Reader,

    Most people are drowning in information.
    Very few are paying attention to the right things.

    This edition of Postnoted is about signals.
    The quiet patterns, early warnings and subtle shifts that appear before headlines, strategy decks and post-mortems.

    It’s for people who notice when something feels off.
    And act before it becomes obvious.

    Inside, you’ll find work that does not shout.
    It sharpens.

    Frameworks that reveal where purpose breaks down.
    Stories that show how failure gives itself away early.
    Arguments that explain why positivity sometimes works, and sometimes absolutely does not.
    Signals from leaders, regulators, carers, builders and thinkers who have learned to see what others miss.

    This is not an opinion.
    It’s not commentary.
    It’s not content designed to disappear.

    It’s thinking you come back to.

    If you care about spotting risk before it becomes damage,  seeing opportunity before it becomes crowded, and making decisions that still make sense six months from now, this edition was made for you.

    Noise is cheap.
    Signals are rare.

    This issue is a collection of them.

    Inside this edition

    • Why purpose fails quietly.
      Not in mission statements. In decisions made on a Tuesday morning when no one’s watching.
    • The moment before things go wrong.
      The signals are there. They just don’t look dramatic enough to act on. Until they are.
    • Inclusion as a strategic advantage, not a moral argument.
      What breaks when systems exclude, and why fixing it is not charity, it’s competence.
    • The danger of being “right for the wrong reasons”.
      When compliance saves you in the short term and costs you everything later.
    • What leaders notice before everyone else catches up.
      And why waiting for proof is often the most expensive decision you can make.
    • The hidden cost of positivity.
      When optimism helps, when it lies, and how to tell the difference.
    • Why some experts can’t see their own method.
      And how that blind spot stops good work from scaling.
    • Human work in an age of intelligent machines.
      Not the future of jobs. The present cost of pretending humans are optional.

    And the underlying question this edition keeps asking

    • What are you seeing now that others will only notice later?

    This is not a magazine you skim.
    It’s one you underline, dog-ear and come back to when something feels off but you can’t yet explain why.

    Warmly,

    Debbie Jenkins

    Publisher & Strategic Editor, Postnoted.com

    Contributors: contact us for multiple contributor-priced copies