
In today's world every company tweet is dissected, every CEO statement is fact-checked in real time, and every balance sheet is expected to be public by default, we’ve somehow convinced ourselves that transparency equals virtue.
But what if we’ve gone too far?
What if the obsession with openness has quietly become the very thing stifling creativity, ambition and even trust itself?
The modern corporation is trapped between two extremes. On one end lies Maximal Trust & Guarantee Co, a fictional firm that reports nothing, revealing none of its internal chaos to the public eye. On the other is Low Trust Society Supermarkets, a company where everything from boardroom conversations to shelf stocking is visible to investors and regulators alike. Both are caricatures, yet they expose the truth we refuse to confront that transparency has diminishing returns.
At first, open reporting keeps executives accountable and investors informed. But at a certain point, the glare of public scrutiny becomes paralyzing. Managers stop taking bold risks because every move will be judged in the next quarterly report. Employees become actors in a performance of productivity, afraid to admit mistakes that could “hurt optics.” Innovation dies not because it’s impossible but because it’s now a reputational hazard.
Look at how quarterly earnings culture has warped corporate priorities. When the next three months matter more than the next three years, companies start gaming numbers instead of building futures. The myth of transparency is that it builds trust. But in reality, it builds fear fear of deviation, fear of failure, fear of being misunderstood by markets that crave predictability more than progress.
Ironically, secrecy has always had its place in business. Apple didn’t become Apple by broadcasting every prototype it killed. Elon Musk’s companies thrive partly because he controls what’s revealed and when. Even in the startup world, stealth mode isn’t cowardice it’s strategy. The mystique gives room for mistakes, for reinvention, for imperfect progress away from the mob’s glare.
The uncomfortable question we should be asking isn’t how much more can we disclose? but how much secrecy is healthy? Every organization needs a space for private chaos where ideas can fail quietly, and trust is built not on exposure, but on competence.
True trust doesn’t come from showing everything. It comes from delivering results even when the process is invisible. In relationships, we understand this instinctively you don’t demand your partner livestream every moment of their day to believe in them. But in business, we’ve confused surveillance for confidence.