Finally, effective iteration respects human limits. Time-boxed sprints, lightweight experiments, and blameless retrospectives maintain speed without burnout. Psychological safety encourages surfacing bad news early, which shortens learning cycles. Even at the personal level, micro-iterations—weekly reviews, habit trackers, and small scope changes—mirror the same pattern. As James Clear notes in Atomic Habits (2018), marginal gains compound; but only if the loop endures. Thus, by pairing meaningful metrics with humane pace, teams transform goals into steady, compounding progress. [...]