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Two pieces of advice that sound like they contradict each other have…

LinkedIn post

Two pieces of advice that sound like they contradict each other have been rattling around in my head lately. The first: you just start. Don't over-plan, don't wait until everything's perfect. Pick a direction and get going. Be prepared to pivot, move fast, and trust that the doing will show you the way. The second: if you don't know the answer, don't make a move. So which is it? I think the tension is actually the framework. There's a category of decision where you genuinely don't have enough information and moving early destroys value. Hiring the wrong person. Signing the wrong contract. Choosing the wrong tech architecture. In those situations, the cost of reversing course is high and the information you need is actually obtainable. Wait. Get the answer. Then there's a completely different category where the information you need doesn't exist yet. It only comes from doing. Starting a content programme. Building a new market. Launching a product nobody has tested. In those cases, the cost of inaction compounds every week you sit still. You're not waiting for information. You're avoiding discomfort. Most people apply the first rule to the second category. They treat 'I'm not ready' as wisdom when it's actually hesitation. The tell is simple. Ask yourself: is there a specific piece of information that would change my decision, and can I get it in a reasonable timeframe? If yes, wait and get it. If no, you're not being careful. You're stalling. For most SMB executives I talk to, content and marketing fall firmly in the second category. The reason you haven't started isn't a strategy problem. You just haven't started. That's the move. Decide which category you're in, and act accordingly.

Mark HadfieldJun 1, 2026Published to Linkedin - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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