C. Northcote Parkinson quotes:

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  • A committee is organic rather than mechanical in its nature: it is not a structure but a plant. It takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts, and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom in their turn.

  • The man whose life is devoted to paperwork has lost the initiative. He is dealing with things that are brought to his notice, having ceased to notice anything for himself.

  • The Law of Triviality... briefly stated, it means that the time spent on any item of the agenda will be in inverse proportion to the sum involved.

  • Parkinson's Fourth Law: The number of people in any working group tends to increase regardless of the amount of work to be done.

  • Delay is the deadliest form of denial.

  • Men enter local politics solely as a result of being unhappily married.

  • Where life is colorful and varied, religion can be austere or unimportant. Where life is appallingly monotonous, religion must be emotional, dramatic and intense. Without the curry, boiled rice can be very dull.

  • Parkinson's First Law: Work expands to fill the time available.

  • Perfection of planned layout is achieved only by institutions on the point of collapse.

  • When any organizational entity expands beyond 21 members, the real power will be in some smaller body.

  • The man who is denied the opportunity of taking decisions of importance begins to regard as important the decisions he is allowed to take.

  • Parkinson's Law is a purely scientific discovery, inapplicable except in theory to the politics of the day. It is not the business of the botanist to eradicate the weeds. Enough for him if he can tell us just how fast they grow.

  • In politics people give you what they think you deserve and deny you what they think you want.

  • Expansion means complexity and complexity decay.

  • Make the people sovereign and the poor will use the machinery of government to dispossess the rich.

  • The chief product of an automated society is a widespread and deepening sense of boredom.

  • Expenditures rise to meet income.

  • The vacuum created by a failure to communicate will quickly be filled with rumor, misrepresentations, drivel, and poison.

  • The void created by the failure to communicate is soon filled with poison, drivel and misrepresentation.

  • Delay is the deadliest form of denial

  • Expenditure rises to meet income.

  • Administrators make work for each other so that they can multiply the number of their subordinates and enhance their prestige.

  • If there is a way to delay an important decision, the good bureaucracy, public or private, will find it.

  • No king or minister could have instructed Newton to discover the law of gravity, for they did not know and could not know that there was such a law to discover. No Treasury official told Fleming to discover penicillin. Nor was Rutherford instructed to split the atom by a certain date...

  • Time spent on any item of the agenda will be in inverse proportion to the sum involved.

  • Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.

  • It is better to be a has-been than a never-was.

  • Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion. General recognition of this fact is shown in the proverbial phrase "It is the busiest man who has time to spare."

  • Imagination is essential and it comes first, for without imagination we are aimless.

  • People of great ability do not emerge, as a rule, from the happiest background. So far as my own observation goes, I would conclude that ability, although hereditary, is improved by an early measure of adversity and improved again by a later measure of success.

  • The smaller the function, the greater the management.

  • The man who is denied the opportunity of taking decisions of importance begins to regard as important the decisions he is allowed to take. He becomes fussy about filing, keen on seeing that pencils are sharpened, eager to ensure that the windows are open (or shut) and apt to use two or three different-colored inks.

  • The basic quality for the diplomat is not intelligence but loyalty.

  • It is now well known, however, that men enter local politics solely as a result of being unhappily married.

  • The matters most debated in a deliberative body tend to be the minor ones where everybody understands the issues.

  • It is the busiest man who has time to spare.

  • Perfection of planning is a symptom of decay. During a period of exciting discovery or progress, there is no time to plan the perfect headquarters.

  • Deliberative bodies become decreasingly effective after they pass five to eight members.

  • The onset of one religion can be resisted only by another.

  • The mind reels at the multiplication of books intended to justify the author's promotion from assistant to associate professor.

  • In the foundation and development of a successful enterprise there must be a single-minded pursuit of financial profit.

  • A committee grows organically, flourishes and blossoms, sunlit on top and shady beneath, until it dies, scattering the seeds from which other committees will spring.

  • The nice thing about standards is, there are so many to choose from. Work expands to fill the time available for its completion.

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