“Be quick, but don’t hurry.” —John Wooden
In the pursuit of speed, many organizations stumble—not from a lack of effort, but from the pressure to rush.
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In the pursuit of speed, many organizations stumble—not from a lack of effort, but from the pressure to rush.
Posted by Will Sansbury
How I've learned to protect time for deep thinking and doing
Posted by Will Sansbury
Declaring calendar bankruptcy every now and then is a good thing.
Posted by Will Sansbury
In the pursuit of speed, many organizations stumble—not from a lack of effort, but from the pressure to rush.
Everybody wants to move fast.
Certainly, some self-sabotage by weighing themselves down with unnecessary bureaucracy that accumulates as they scale. They accidentally create an environment that won’t permit speed.
But in my experience, that’s not the most common cause of systemic failure to deliver. Most failure stems from trying to go faster than you can responsibly go.
We don’t lose races because our people are walking when they should be running. We lose because we force our people to run faster than they can.
We force our people to hurry, and then we are surprised when they stumble.
Cover Image: “Hurry” by Georgie Pauwels is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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