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Why I Am Writing This
Almost every founder I work with has a decision sitting somewhere in the background. They know what it is. They've known for a while. They're just not making it yet.
The Founder Within is about the inner work that shapes how you lead. And the relationship founders have with difficult decisions is, I think, one of the most underexplored parts of that work.
This week: Why founders delay hard decisions, what it costs when they do, and a simple framework for making a good call when you have limited time and imperfect information.
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She had known for three months that the partnership wasn't working. She'd told me in our second session. She told me again in our fourth. By the sixth, she was still explaining why now wasn't quite the right time to address it.
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By that point the cost was visible. Her team had noticed the tension and were quietly working around it. Two key decisions had stalled because they touched the contested territory. She was spending more energy managing the situation than building the thing she'd started the company to build.
When I finally asked her what she was waiting for, she said she didn't have enough information yet. She never would. That's not how hard decisions work.
The official reason founders delay hard decisions is usually "I need more data" or "the timing isn't right." These are real considerations. They are also, sometimes, cover stories for something simpler: the decision requires accepting a loss, and the brain resists loss more strongly than it pursues gain.
Delaying a hard decision doesn't make it easier. It transfers the cost. Instead of making a clear call now, you pay in slow leakage: team energy spent on uncertainty, trust eroded by visible avoidance, momentum lost to a problem that everyone can see but no one is allowed to name.
The founder who delays rarely realises how much this costs, because the cost doesn't arrive as a single event. It shows up in a hundred small ways over months, until one day something breaks and the decision gets made under the worst possible conditions.
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The question is never "do I have enough information?" The question is "do I have enough information to make a reasonable call right now?"
You rarely will. Most decisions worth making come with irreducible uncertainty. The skill is not eliminating that uncertainty. It is learning to act inside it without being paralysed by it.
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| My Story |
The Decision I Kept Repackaging as a Question |
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There was a point in building VisionVoyage where I needed to decide whether to keep running a particular offering that wasn't working. The numbers were clear enough. The energy it was taking from me was clear. But I kept framing it as a question that needed more time: maybe the positioning is off, maybe the timing is wrong, maybe it just needs one more iteration.
What I was actually doing was avoiding the loss. Shutting it down meant admitting I'd misjudged something, and that felt harder than continuing to invest in something I already knew wasn't right.
The decision I eventually made in twenty minutes had been available to me for four months. I just wasn't ready to own the cost of it. Once I did, everything that had been stuck started moving again.
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A Framework for Making the Call |
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This Week's Tools
Three Questions to Ask Before You Decide
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What is the cost of not deciding today?
Name it specifically. Not "things will stay messy" but what is actually happening right now because this decision hasn't been made. Team uncertainty, stalled work, your own mental load. Making the cost of inaction visible is often enough to end the delay.
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Is this reversible?
Most decisions are more reversible than they feel in the moment. If you can adjust course after making the call, the bar for acting is lower than you think. Save your caution for the decisions that genuinely can't be undone. For everything else, a good enough decision now beats a perfect decision six months from now.
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3
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What would you tell another founder to do?
This one cuts through faster than anything else. When you're inside a decision, the emotional weight of it distorts your judgment. Step outside it for a moment. If a founder you respected came to you with the exact same situation, what would you say? You almost always already know the answer. This question just lets you hear it.
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A Framework Worth Knowing |
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Jeff Bezos built one of the most useful decision-making frameworks in business, and it fits on a napkin. He called them One-Way Doors and Two-Way Doors. A one-way door is a decision you cannot reverse: selling the company, letting go of a co-founder, pivoting the core product. These deserve slow, deliberate thinking. A two-way door is a decision you can walk back if it doesn't work: a pricing test, a new hire for a role that didn't exist before, a product feature you can ship and pull. These should be made fast, with roughly 70% of the information you'd ideally want. Waiting for more is just delay dressed up as diligence. Most founders, Bezos observed, treat two-way door decisions like one-way doors. That's where the paralysis comes from. Before you sit with a decision any longer, ask yourself honestly: which door is this actually?
None of this is about being reckless. It is about being honest with yourself about when "I need more information" is real, and when it is a way of staying comfortable in the uncertainty without having to own the discomfort of the decision itself.
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This Week's Reflection
What decision have you been carrying for longer than you should? And what is the real reason you haven't made it yet?
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The hardest decisions are hard not because the answer is unclear, but because the answer requires giving something up. A direction, a relationship, a version of the plan you were attached to. The clarity usually arrives the moment you stop looking for a way to avoid the loss.
Next week, we get into something that comes up constantly in the work I do with founders: how to have the conversations you've been putting off, with your team, your co-founder, or yourself.
See you Wednesday. Riddhi Founder, VisionVoyage
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