
By Atiq Raja
There is a familiar reflex whenever organizations underperform or individuals fall short of expectations. We look for more effort, more motivation, more grit. We arrange training sessions, deliver stirring speeches, and urge people to “try harder”. Dan Heath’s Reset asks us to pause and consider a more uncomfortable possibility: that the problem is not the people at all, but the systems we have quietly accepted as normal.
At its heart, Reset is a book about design rather than discipline. Heath argues, with disarming clarity, that most failures are not moral shortcomings or lapses of willpower. They are predictable outcomes of poorly designed environments. When systems reward the wrong behavior, create unnecessary friction, or bury priorities under clutter, even the most capable people will struggle. Change the system, Heath insists, and behavior will follow.
This is a powerful corrective to the modern obsession with hustle. In offices, schools and even homes, there is an assumption that success depends on extraordinary motivation. Heath turns that assumption on its head. He shows how ordinary people can achieve extraordinary outcomes when the conditions around them are thoughtfully arranged. Conversely, he demonstrates how broken systems exhaust and demoralize even the most driven individuals.
One of the book’s most striking ideas is the call to stop “fixing” people. Leaders, Heath notes, often reach for coaching, performance plans or incentives when results disappoint. Yet these interventions frequently treat symptoms rather than causes. If capable employees repeatedly make the same mistakes, the question should not be why they are careless, but why the system makes errors so easy to repeat. What does it reward? What does it ignore? What does it quietly make difficult?
Closely linked to this is Heath’s emphasis on leverage points. Rather than attempting sweeping reforms, Reset urges readers to look for small, well-chosen changes that produce disproportionate benefits. A single clarified rule can prevent months of confusion. A simple checklist can eliminate costly rework. One clear decision can remove the background noise that drains attention day after day. Progress, Heath argues, rarely comes from doing more. It comes from identifying the right small thing and doing it well.
Defaults play a central role in this thinking. People, whether they admit it or not, usually follow the path of least resistance. When the default option is flawed, poor outcomes become routine. When the default is well designed, success becomes almost automatic. Heath challenges leaders to stop asking why people fail to do the right thing and instead ask why the right thing is not the easiest thing to do. This subtle shift has profound implications for policy, management and everyday decision-making.
Perhaps the most counter-intuitive lesson in Reset is the power of subtraction. Modern organizations tend to equate improvement with addition: more rules, more meetings, more oversight, more reporting. Heath makes a persuasive case that many systems improve faster when something is removed. Unnecessary steps, redundant approvals and outdated policies create friction that slowly erodes performance. Simplification, in this framing, is not laziness or neglect. It is a form of strategic clarity.
Underlying all of this is a blunt reassessment of motivation. Heath does not deny its importance, but he argues it has been dramatically overvalued. Well-designed systems, he shows, can deliver strong results even when motivation is average. Poorly designed systems, by contrast, burn through enthusiasm and leave people cynical and fatigued. For leaders, educators and parents, this is a liberating insight. It suggests that success depends less on constant exhortation and more on creating clear goals, logical processes and fair feedback loops.
Measurement also comes under scrutiny. Heath warns against the seduction of vanity metrics that look impressive but say little about real progress. Activity is easy to count; impact is harder. A meaningful reset, he argues, aligns measurement with purpose. The question is not whether people are busy, but whether their efforts are moving the needle in ways that matter.
(The writer is a rights activist and CEO of AR Trainings and Consultancy, with degrees in Political Science and English Literature, can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)
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