Question
What is Brooks law coordination?
Quick Answer
Coordination itself costs effort — keep the coordination cost proportional to the benefit.
Brooks law coordination is a concept in personal epistemology: Coordination itself costs effort — keep the coordination cost proportional to the benefit.
Example: You are managing a project with three people. Communication is fluid — three bilateral channels, quick sync meetings, fast decisions. Then the project falls behind and someone suggests adding four more people. Now you have seven people and twenty-one communication channels. Meetings that took fifteen minutes take an hour. Every decision requires bringing more people up to speed. Status updates multiply. The new people need onboarding, which pulls the original three off productive work. Two weeks after 'adding resources,' you are further behind than before — not because the new people are incompetent, but because the coordination overhead of seven people exceeds the productive capacity those extra people added. The project did not need more hands. It needed the same hands with less friction between them.
This concept is part of Phase 26 (Multi-Agent Coordination) in the How to Think curriculum, which builds the epistemic infrastructure for multi-agent coordination.
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