The Inverse Cognitive Maneuver: Use Your Brain's Limits to Build Better Products
Tiny teams don't succeed despite their size. They succeed because of it. This article introduces the Inverse Cognitive Maneuver, a framework for using your team's cognitive limits as a product stra...

Source: DEV Community
Tiny teams don't succeed despite their size. They succeed because of it. This article introduces the Inverse Cognitive Maneuver, a framework for using your team's cognitive limits as a product strategy rather than a problem to solve. It draws on research from Brooks, Ringelmann, Dunbar, and Cowan, examines companies from Telegram to Evernote, and provides a practical tool (the 10-slot budget) you can apply Monday morning. Telegram serves 1 billion users with around 30 engineers.1 Not 30 engineers on the messaging team. 30 engineers total. Encryption, multi-platform clients, infrastructure, everything. $30 billion valuation. Pavel Durov is still the only product manager. Most companies would staff that with 300 engineers minimum. Telegram does it with 30. And they're not planning to change. This isn't luck or talent. It's a deliberate strategy, one that has a name, a theory behind it, and a growing body of evidence. Telegram isn't alone: WhatsApp had 55 employees2 serving 450 million us