Brian Moore introduced a powerful lens for understanding value streams — the Constructal Law of Physics. Developed by Adrian Bejan, this law states that for any flow system to persist, it must evolve in a way that makes flow easier. While originally used to explain natural systems like river deltas, lungs, or lightning, Moore shows how these same principles apply to teams, tools, and organizational structures.
Value doesn’t just move — it flows. Like water down a mountain or air through lungs, work travels through paths of least resistance. The Constructal Law reveals why systems naturally form tree-like structures to optimize access. It explains why freedom, hierarchy, and adaptability aren’t optional — they’re required for survival.
Freedom: Systems must evolve. Rigid structures kill innovation. Adaptive policies, variable solution intent, and decentralized decision-making allow flow to flourish.
Hierarchy: True hierarchy is not about control but coordination — like cells forming organs, teams form systems.
Beauty: Flow systems that are efficient are also aesthetically aligned. Beauty here means harmony — in feedback, in structure, in purpose.
Too often, Agile and VSM efforts get reduced to tools or rituals. Moore reframes them as expressions of physical law — guiding principles that can make organizations more resilient, harmonious, and alive. It’s not just about delivery velocity. It’s about creating systems that last because they flow.