When Decisions Don’t Settle, Work Slows

The Problem

Most leaders believe they are helping when they stay close to decisions.

They answer questions quickly.
They make themselves available.
They keep things moving.

At least, that is the intention.

But in many organizations, the opposite happens.

Work slows.
People hesitate.
Execution becomes uneven.

Not because the team lacks skill.
Not because priorities are unclear.

But because decisions never settle.

Every organization makes decisions.
The real question is not whether decisions are being made.
It is where they are being made and how often they must be made again.

When routine work requires judgment each time it appears, cognitive load rises quietly but relentlessly.

Small choices stack up:

  • Which version should we use?

  • Is this acceptable or not?

  • Do we handle this the same way as last time?

  • Should I check with you first?

None of these questions are difficult on their own.
Together, they create drag.

Attention fragments.
Confidence erodes.
Work slows under the weight of constant interpretation.

The Shift

Early rail systems faced a similar problem.

The technology existed.
The ambition was there.
The demand was real.

Yet trains ran late.
Schedules slipped.
Confusion cascaded.

The issue was not mechanical.

Too many decisions were being made in real time.

Conductors adjusted departure times.
Dispatchers improvised routes.
Supervisors approved changes on the fly.

Each decision felt responsible.
Each adjustment felt necessary.

But nothing settled.

When one change rippled through the system, another followed.
Small judgments compounded into large disruption.

The breakthrough did not come from faster trains.

It came from fixed schedules.

Timetables were standardized.
Right-of-way rules were set.
Decisions were made once and held.

Judgment moved upstream.
Movement stabilized downstream.

The system became predictable not because people worked harder, but because decisions stopped moving.

What to Do

If decisions are not settling, leaders must act deliberately.

Not by answering faster.
But by deciding once.

Here is a simple way to start.

1. Identify the recurring question.
Pay attention to the questions you answer over and over.
Not the strategic ones.
The ordinary ones that interrupt the day.

2. Decide the answer once.
Do not look for the perfect answer.
Choose a clear, reasonable one that can hold.

3. Write it down.
Turn the decision into a short rule, default, or standard.
One sentence is enough.

4. Make it visible.
Put it where the work happens.
A document, checklist, or shared reference.

5. Stop answering it live.
When the question comes up again, point to the decision.
Let the system respond instead of you.

This is how decisions stop moving.
And how work starts flowing.

The Heartbeat

Stability is not created by control.
It is created by clarity that outlives the moment.

Work moves faster when leaders stop carrying decisions that should already be built into the system.

When decisions settle, teams move.

Next Step

Notice one question you answer repeatedly.

Not the big ones.
The ordinary ones.

Decide it once.

Write it down as a rule, a default, or a reference.
Then stop answering it live.

Let the decision do the work.

Where are decisions in your organization still being made in the moment, when they should already be settled?

Next
Next

When “Good” Isn’t Defined, Work Slows Down