A new episode of Planet Money puts office folklore to the test, examining why meetings drag and managers struggle. Hosts Kenny Malone, Sarah Gonzalez, and Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi explore classic “laws of the office,” asking whether these ideas still explain daily work in 2026 and what can be done about them.
The hosts walk through well-known theories like Parkinson’s Law and the Peter Principle. They compare the claims with their own experiences and invite listeners to judge what holds up. The episode, produced by Horowitz-Ghazi and edited by Bryant Urstadt, aims to separate useful guidance from catchy slogans under executive producer Alex Goldmark.
Where These Office “Laws” Came From
Parkinson’s Law dates to the 1950s and was coined by British historian Cyril Northcote Parkinson. It suggests tasks swell to fill the time available. In meeting culture, that often means a 60-minute invite becomes a 60-minute meeting, even when the goal could be met in 25 minutes.
“Work expands to the time allotted.”
The Peter Principle entered management talk in 1969 through educator Laurence J. Peter. It argues workers get promoted based on current job performance, not future job fit, leading many to reach roles where they underperform.
“People are promoted to their level of incompetence.”
These ideas have endured because they are easy to spot in office routines. The hosts point out that once you learn them, you start seeing them everywhere.
Testing Theories Against Daily Work
Malone, Gonzalez, and Horowitz-Ghazi run informal tests on each other, asking how often meetings end early and what happens when calendar blocks shrink. They compare notes on promotions that rewarded output but ignored coaching or planning skills.
Gonzalez notes how recurring meetings tend to take the full slot, even when the agenda is short. Malone adds that managers often inherit teams without training, then struggle with feedback or delegation. Horowitz-Ghazi reflects on deadlines: tighter windows can spur focus, but too little time leads to stress and lower quality.
- Meetings often match the calendar block, not the actual need.
- Promotions based on individual performance can miss management fit.
- Shorter deadlines may boost focus but risk shortcuts.
What Research And Practice Suggest
Management research has examined these claims for decades. Timeboxing can reduce overwork, but only if paired with clear goals. Firms that set 25- or 45-minute default meetings report more punctual endings and better focus, especially with standing agendas and pre-reads.
The Peter Principle has inspired experiments with dual career tracks. Many companies now offer senior individual contributor roles that pay well without requiring people management. This reduces pressure to promote top performers into roles they may not want.
Training also matters. New managers with structured coaching show fewer performance dips. When feedback, hiring, and budgeting are taught skills—not assumptions—teams adapt faster and turnover drops.
Counterpoints And Limits
Not every meeting expands. Clear agendas, defined decisions, and a culture of ending early can break the pattern. Some teams routinely finish ahead of schedule by locking in the decision they need at the start.
Promotion outcomes vary by industry. In smaller firms, people often wear multiple hats and learn fast on the job. In larger organizations, slow feedback loops can hide weak management longer.
The hosts note these principles are guides, not rules of nature. They work as warnings that prompt better design: right-sized meetings, clear decision rights, and promotions that value teaching, empathy, and planning.
The Hybrid Work Effect
Remote and hybrid work have changed the equation. Video calls multiply quickly, making bloat more visible. But digital tools also make fixes easier: shorter default invites, shared documents, and async updates.
Teams that cut standing meetings and move updates to written notes report fewer late-night pings and more deep work time. Rotation of facilitators also keeps sessions focused and fair.
Practical Takeaways
From the episode and broader practice, a few low-cost steps emerge.
- Set meeting defaults to 25 or 50 minutes and end when done.
- Define the decision and owner before the meeting starts.
- Create dual tracks: management and expert paths.
- Train new managers in feedback, hiring, and planning.
- Use async updates; reserve meetings for decisions or debate.
Planet Money’s look at workplace laws offers a clear message: catchy rules endure because they feel true, but the fix is design, not slogans. Expect more companies to trim meeting blocks, formalize manager training, and expand non-manager career paths. The next test will be whether these changes stick as organizations balance speed, quality, and well-being.