Reducing information asymmetry helps create more parity in relationships, and keeping people informed often creates better motion toward outcomes.
Information asymmetry affects relationships more than we often acknowledge. When one side knows much more than the other, parity starts to disappear, and the relationship can become less fluid, less trusting, and less effective.
Keeping people informed helps restore that parity. It gives everyone a better sense of context, direction, and timing, which usually improves both collaboration and trust.
It also helps create motion. When people know what is happening, they can respond faster, contribute better, and move toward outcomes with fewer misunderstandings. A lot of progress is really just clear communication compounding over time.