Thinking · World
Understanding who holds leverage and why.
Power is not a fixed property. It is a relationship — constantly shifting, constantly contested. The first step to navigating any situation is knowing where it actually sits.
Power is the capacity to shape outcomes. It is not always held by whoever holds a title. It flows through information, resources, relationships, and fear. In any system — political, organizational, social — the visible hierarchy rarely tells the full story.
Ask not who is in charge. Ask who has leverage over whom — and why.
Leverage concentrates around four things: control of information, control of resources, control of access, and the ability to inflict or prevent harm. Any entity that controls two or more of these simultaneously becomes structurally powerful — regardless of what the org chart says.
No one is powerful in isolation. Power is always relative to a specific relationship, context, and moment. The same actor can hold enormous leverage in one domain and near-zero in another. Mapping power means mapping relationships, not just positions.
When analyzing any situation, ask: who benefits most from the current arrangement? Who would lose the most if it changed? Who controls the narrative around it? Whose absence would be most disruptive? The answers to these questions reliably locate real power — wherever it sits.
Tap a source to understand how each lever shapes power.
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