It is easy to interpret “be made” as meaning “ability” or “skill,” but when you actually have a concrete project in mind, you may ask yourself, “Can I do it? Can you do it? When you actually have a specific project, you may think, “Do I have the time to do it? No?” It often comes down to “Do I have time for it?
- Well, “I don’t have time.” also means that the project loses in a time competition for resources among multiple projects that require time.
- It also takes time to acquire skills.
If we abstract “I don’t have time” to “I don’t have the resources to do the project.”
- Can you do it?” often comes down to trust and other SOC to get the resources you need.
- It’s one thing to say, “Give me resources and I can do it,” and another to say, “Show me you can do it and I’ll give you resources,” which causes deadlock.
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