Modern workplace culture rewards the snap call. The leader who decides in the meeting, the operator who never agonizes, the founder with conviction. There’s a real value to decisiveness, especially when delays cost more than mistakes. But the cult of speed has overshot the evidence. A large body of decision research, from Kahneman’s dual-process work to organizational studies of executive judgment, finds that fast decisions are systematically biased on a predictable set of dimensions, and that even brief deliberate pauses sharply improve outcomes for the kinds of choices that actually matter.
The trick is knowing which decisions are which.
What fast thinking gets wrong
System 1 thinking, the fast, intuitive mode, is excellent at pattern matching in domains where you’ve had thousands of accurate-feedback reps. Chess masters, experienced ER physicians, and seasoned firefighters genuinely do see solutions instantly and they tend to be right. The problem is that most professional decisions, hiring, strategy, capital allocation, don’t offer the rapid, unambiguous feedback loops that train accurate intuition. In those settings, fast decisions reliably overweight recency, vividness, and the views of the most confident person in the room. Daniel Kahneman’s “Noise” documents striking variance in the same expert’s judgments across days, mood, and time of meeting. The illusion of decisiveness is much stronger than the underlying accuracy.
When pausing actually pays
Even short delays meaningfully improve quality on consequential choices. Research from the Decision Lab and from Chip and Dan Heath’s work on the WRAP framework suggests that running a decision through three lightweight steps, widening options, reality-testing assumptions, attaining distance before deciding, increases the probability of a satisfactory outcome substantially. The pause doesn’t have to be long. Sleeping on a hire, scheduling a 24-hour cool-down before signing a contract, asking “what would have to be true for this to be wrong?” before committing: each costs almost nothing and routinely catches errors that would cost a lot. The asymmetry is the whole point. Reversible decisions can be made fast. Irreversible ones rarely deserve to be.
The real skill is triage
Jeff Bezos’s two-way-door framing, popularized in Amazon shareholder letters, is the cleanest articulation. Most decisions are reversible: try it, learn, adjust. Speed wins. A small fraction are irreversible or expensive to unwind: the acquisition, the firing, the public commitment, the betting-the-company strategic pivot. For those, the cost of a bad decision dwarfs the cost of a slow one. The error most leaders make isn’t being too slow on small things, it’s being too fast on the big ones because the same speed that built their reputation on small calls now feels like identity. Triaging which kind of door you’re walking through is the skill that separates good operators from merely confident ones.
The bottom line
Fast decisions are fine for low-stakes, reversible calls. They’re a liability for the consequential ones, and the bias they introduce is well-documented enough that pretending otherwise is professional malpractice. Build the habit of asking, before deciding, which kind of decision this actually is. Then match your tempo to the answer instead of to your reputation.
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