The Case for Strain

Traditional capacity measures like utilization and productivity overlook how work is actually experienced. Orgsure introduces strain—a capacity-response measure that captures the tension between workload and the ability to absorb it.

Every organization wants to understand how much capacity it really has. Leaders often rely on time  tracking, utilization rates, or productivity ratios to find the answer. These measures appear objective but  are one-sided and rarely capture how work is actually experienced. Capacity looks different across  roles. A production worker, a project manager, and a product designer all face limits, but the way those  limits appear and affect performance is entirely different. A single utilization figure cannot describe them  all. 

A new measure, work or position strain, offers a different way to consider capacity. It is not a throughput  measure. Instead, it’s a capacity-response indicator that describes how a position responds to the level  of work it faces. Strain explicitly expresses the tension between work demand and the resource’s ability  to absorb it. Its complement, slack, represents reserve capacity. Together they show whether a role is  

operating with resilience or under pressure. Strain shifts the idea of capacity from one of volume to one  of impact. 

The Limits of Traditional Capacity Metrics 

Traditional approaches to capacity reduce work to time or quantity. They count hours available, tasks  completed, or percentages of utilization. While easy to collect, these measures miss the deeper  dynamics of capacity. Time logs ignore the cognitive load of switching between complex tasks. Output  measures overlook the coordination efforts embedded in quality and rework. Utilization rates assume all  activities are equal, even though some require deep focus or extensive decision-making that limit how  much can be done. 

The result is an incomplete picture. Some roles appear underutilized on paper but are already stretched  by complexity and interdependence. Others seem efficient but carry hidden slack because their work is  standardized and predictable. Quantity-based methods do not explain how individuals and teams  actually respond when demand increases or conditions change. 

What Strain Reveals 

Strain reframes capacity from “how much work is being done” to “how the role is responding to its  current level of demand.” This makes it possible to compare across very different jobs using a  consistent standard of capacity health. Measured on a five-point scale, strain values can be interpreted  as follows: 

  • High and Low Slack (1–2): These roles have clear reserve capacity and can absorb new projects or  disruptions with little effect. 
  • Balanced (3): These roles are well matched to their workload, operating steadily but with limited room  for change. 
  • Low and High Strain (4–5): These roles are stretched. Even small disruptions, such as turnover or  added initiatives, can trigger performance or quality declines. 

As depicted above, slack and strain serve as endpoints on a continuum of capacity-response. They  describe how demand influences the resource performing the work, showing whether that influence  builds stability or erodes it. A healthy organization maintains the right mix of both. 

How Orgsure Developed and Applies the Measure

At Orgsure, we developed and implemented strain to improve or augment how organizations  understand and analyze capacity. We view it as a companion measure to those focusing on time or  output. Orgsure calculates strain using position-level data to provide a consistent scale across all roles,  regardless of function or work type. 

By aggregating strain data, leaders can see patterns that reveal where the organization carries hidden  slack or unsustainable load. They can model the effects of change, such as reorganizations or  workload shifts, and understand how those changes will influence resilience. Strain makes it possible to  measure not just how much work exists, but how well the structure can handle it. 

The Core Insight 

Work strain transforms capacity measurement from counting effort to understanding impact. It shows  how work demand affects people and structures, highlighting both resilience and risk. By treating strain  (and slack) as a capacity-response measure, Orgsure gives leaders a precise way to see how much  the organization can truly take on. It turns capacity impacts from an assumption into evidence, and  helps design structures that perform reliably, even under pressure. 

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The Role of Pay Distribution in Value Analysis

Most organizations view pay purely as a cost, but Orgsure treats it as a signal of value. By analyzing where each position sits within its pay range, Orgsure adjusts value calculations to reflect real return on compensation.

The Gap Between Capabilities and Work

Many organizations map capabilities but stop short of linking them to the work that expresses them. As a result, capability models remain theoretical, disconnected from structure, cost, and value.

Why Measuring Both Expertise and Intensity Matters

Not all work is created equal — some requires deep expertise, others relentless intensity. Yet most systems treat them the same.