Why teams thrive when they choose learning or performance

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I once ran a sprint that was meant to do two things at once. We wanted new insight from customers and we wanted a shippable feature by Friday. Half the team interviewed users and poked at prototypes. The other half argued for tickets that would move our activation rate. By Thursday night we had a Figma graveyard, a noisy backlog, and a room full of people who felt like they had let each other down. No one was lazy. The system was confused.

It took me a while to say this out loud. Mixing goals made us look ambitious. It also made good people feel incompetent, which is the fastest way to burn trust. I have since seen the same pattern across early teams in Malaysia, Singapore, and Saudi. The founders are smart. The market is noisy. The calendar has too many investor check-ins. It feels safer to demand both curiosity and output from the same group at the same time. It is not safer. It is slow.

Here is what finally clicked. The company needs learning and the company needs performance. That is true for every stage. The team, however, needs one job at a time. When a team is told to discover truth and to hit the quarter’s number in the same sprint, people cannot tell which promise to keep when these goals collide. Clear people do better work. Confused people work harder and still look behind.

Look at the meetings. In a blended team, standups sound like two languages in one call. The product researcher says, “We need one more week of interviews to understand the churn story.” The growth lead replies, “We need to ship the onboarding change now or we miss target.” Neither is wrong. Both are undercut. After three weeks of this you see short tempers, then quiet resentment, then a subtle freeze. People stop volunteering bold ideas because bold ideas extend the timeline. People also stop committing to delivery dates because delivery without conviction feels like gambling.

The fix looked simple on paper and felt scary in real life. We drew a line. We decided the product pod would be a learning team for six weeks. Their job was to reduce uncertainty, not increase MRR. We picked a separate growth pod whose job was to perform. Their scoreboard was a single number and they could choose any ethical tactic that kept the product stable. The two pods met once a week to trade inputs. No one was allowed to judge the other by the wrong scoreboard. My job was to defend this rule even when the week felt tense.

Once we did this, the tone shifted. The learning team stopped apologizing for not shipping. They started sharing uncomfortable findings that would have been kept quiet in a blended sprint. The performance team stopped waiting for permission to try a faster test. They cut noise in the pipeline and hit a clean weekly target. We did not suddenly become geniuses. We simply removed cross purpose.

If you suspect you are running a blended mess, start with the scoreboard. Ask your team which number matters this month. If you hear two numbers that live in different worlds, you have found the crack. A learning team should be measured by conviction gained, useful falsifications, and time to insight. A performance team should be measured by throughput on work that already has conviction behind it, or by a live business outcome such as activation rate, net revenue, or uptime. Do not punish a researcher with revenue targets. Do not judge a growth operator by the number of interviews completed. People rise to the number you choose.

Rituals matter as much as metrics. A learning team needs rituals that surface unknowns. That looks like weekly insight reviews where the story is the deliverable. It looks like clear experiment design, tight debriefs, and aggressive deletion of work that did not survive contact with reality. A performance team needs rituals that lock calendar and pipeline. That looks like frozen scopes mid sprint, precise handoffs, and predictable demos that are boring in the best way. When you see a curiosity ritual inside a team that is supposed to deliver, or a shipping ritual inside a team that is supposed to discover, you will feel the grit in the gears.

Hiring follows the lane. In Southeast Asia, we often hire for hybrid strengths because we want versatile people who can do more with less. I like versatility. I do not like pretending that a human can want opposite things at the same time. Explorers get energy from finding patterns. Finishers get energy from crossing the line. If you keep scoring explorers on finish line metrics, they will become quieter versions of themselves or they will leave. If you keep scoring finishers on exploration outputs, they will either fake it or burn out. The fix is not to build silos. The fix is to give people a season where their instincts match the job.

Switching lanes needs a gate. When a learning team finds a strong seam of truth, they should declare it and ask to switch into a performance cycle with a clean brief. When a performance team hits diminishing returns, they should ask for a reset and hand the baton to a learning cycle without shame. This is where many founders hesitate because switching looks like slowing down. The opposite is true. Switching on purpose saves you from three more weeks of pretending that a tactic will work when everyone already knows it will not.

There is a cultural piece in KSA and Malaysia that is worth naming. Harmony is valued. Direct disagreement is sometimes softened to keep the room comfortable. I have learned to set the rule in the invite itself. If the team is in a learning season, curiosity beats speed in every debate. If the team is in a performance season, reliability beats novelty in every debate. When you say this plainly, people will still disagree, but the disagreement stays inside the correct lane. Conflict gets cleaner and shorter, which is what harmony should feel like in a working team.

Founders ask me if a small company can afford two distinct teams. You often cannot. You can still protect the lanes by time boxing. Make the next three weeks a learning sprint for the whole team with a simple public brief. Then make the next three weeks a performance sprint with a single target. The context switch is a tax, so keep the blocks chunky. Use one shared ritual to end each block that records what was learned or what was shipped. This way the company brain compounds.

This is not a call to pick one forever. The company needs both for as long as it lives. The point is practical. At the team level, and especially in early stage seasons, trying to split attention inside the same sprint makes average work feel like hard work. Strong teams take turns. Strong leaders protect the turn. If you do this, you will notice a second order effect. People regain self respect because they can tell when they did a good job. That changes how they speak to each other and how they take risk. It also changes how fast you can actually move.

The phrase that helps me is simple. Design the scoreboard to match the promise. A learning team promises the company that it will remove fog. A performance team promises the company that it will move the number. Both promises are valuable. Both break when we pretend they are the same promise.

If you want a line to bring into your next standup, try this. For the next six weeks, this pod is a learning pod. We will be judged by how much clarity we create. We will ship prototypes only to test assumptions. We will cut any work that does not teach us something useful. After that, this pod becomes a performance pod. We will be judged by one number and we will protect the calendar. Everyone is invited to give feedback on both seasons. Everyone is also invited to call out when they see us slip into a blended mess.

You can call this idea many things. I call it respect. People do better when the ask is clean. Companies do better when they accept the cost of focus. In my experience, learning vs performance teams outperform blended teams because the work finally has a single voice. Pick a lane. Protect it. Switch with a gate. Your team will breathe again, and the work will tell you it is ready for the next season.


Image Credits: Unsplash
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