When standards are unclear, everything becomes a debate.
Most leaders think standards limit flexibility.
In reality, the absence of standards creates drag.
When expectations aren’t defined:
- decisions slow down
- quality varies
- leaders get pulled into everything
Standards don’t restrict execution. They remove unnecessary judgment calls.
Where I Used to Get This Wrong
I avoided setting standards because I wanted room to adapt.
What I didn’t realize is that ambiguity forces constant intervention. I became the bottleneck – not because I wanted control (sometimes I did), but because nothing was clearly defined.
Once standards are set:
- decisions accelerate
- accountability sharpens
- execution improves without constant oversight
That’s freedom.
What I Executed on This Morning
I defined a standard that had existed only implicitly.
Now it’s explicit.
- what “good” looks like
- what’s acceptable
- what isn’t
That single clarification eliminated future friction immediately.
Why Standards Matter So Much
If you execute one thing tomorrow morning, define a standard.
Make expectations visible so execution doesn’t rely on interpretation.
One thing. First thing. Then let clarity replace friction.