The Tension Between Speed and Clarity - Why moving quickly can sometimes create more work later
Speed often feels like progress.
Decisions made.
Meetings closed.
Momentum maintained.
But speed and clarity are not the same.
Earlier in The Human Shift, The Cost of Constant Readiness, we explored how readiness can create urgency where it may not actually exist. When leaders move quickly from that state, decisions can reflect pressure more than perspective.
A Reframe
Speed moves things forward.
Clarity moves things well.
One Simple Practice
Before your next decision, ask:
“Am I choosing speed—or am I choosing clarity?”
If it’s speed, ask:
“What would clarity require right now?”
Question to Consider
Where might slowing down actually create stronger outcomes?
What This Looks Like In Practice
Many organizations don’t suffer from slow decision-making—they suffer from fast decisions that require correction. Clarity reduces rework..
In the shift,
Dr. Nika White
P.S.
What decision today would benefit from just a little more space?
Read more from The Human Shift on Substack, where I share long-form essays on leadership, culture, and how we work and live.
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