That is much better, but it raises a more specific question: here you described the loop as a property of the task; but then you also wrote
Hire people like me
long OODA loop
Which seems to mean you are the one with the long loop. I can easily imagine different people having different maximum loop-lengths, beyond which they are likely to fail. Am I correct in interpreting this to mean something like trying to ensure that the remote worker can handle the longest-loop task you have to give them?
That is much better, but it raises a more specific question: here you described the loop as a property of the task; but then you also wrote
Hire people like me
long OODA loop
Which seems to mean you are the one with the long loop. I can easily imagine different people having different maximum loop-lengths, beyond which they are likely to fail. Am I correct in interpreting this to mean something like trying to ensure that the remote worker can handle the longest-loop task you have to give them?
I think tasks, environments and people have a range of allowable OODA loops, and that it’s very damaging if there isn’t an overlap of all three.