Doing Nothing Is Usually the Most Expensive Decision
Leaders spend a lot of time worrying about making the wrong decision.
Choosing the wrong strategy.
Hiring the wrong partner.
Investing in the wrong initiative.
Those concerns are understandable.
But in many organizations, the most expensive decision is the one nobody talks about.
Doing nothing.
I see this all the time when talking with CEOs and leadership teams.
They know something needs to change. They can feel it.
Growth has slowed.
The sales pipeline is thinner than it used to be.
Referrals are inconsistent.
Marketing feels scattered or reactive.
Everyone agrees something should be done.
But the conversation often ends with some version of this:
“Let’s revisit it next quarter.”
“Let’s see how the year starts.”
“We’re not quite ready yet.”
Those responses feel safe.
But they usually come with a hidden cost.
Because while the decision gets delayed, the problem doesn’t.
The same issues keep showing up.
The same missed opportunities keep happening.
The same competitors keep gaining ground.
And the revenue that could have been captured quietly disappears.
I call that growth leakage.
Most companies never measure it.
They measure expenses.
They measure marketing spend.
They measure budgets.
But they rarely measure the revenue that never shows up because a problem wasn’t addressed.
Inaction feels safe in the moment.
But it compounds over time.
I’ve seen organizations spend months debating whether they should invest in strategy, messaging, or growth initiatives.
Six months later, they are having the exact same conversation.
The market didn’t wait.
Their competitors didn’t wait.
The opportunities didn’t wait.
The cost of inaction kept growing.
Here’s the irony.
Most of the leaders I work with are not afraid of hard work.
They are willing to invest.
They are willing to improve.
They simply want to avoid making the wrong decision.
But in many cases, the bigger risk isn’t making the wrong decision.
The bigger risk is waiting too long to make any decision at all.
Growth rarely comes from perfect timing.
Growth comes from clarity, action, and momentum.
You learn.
You adjust.
You improve.
But none of that happens if the organization stays stuck in analysis and hesitation.
Doing nothing may feel like the safer path.
In reality, it is often the most expensive one.
The cost just doesn’t show up on a balance sheet.
It shows up in the opportunities that never happen.
The companies that grow rarely have perfect timing.
They simply decide to move.
They gather insight.
They clarify their strategy.
They take action.
Then they adjust and improve along the way.
Waiting for certainty usually just means waiting longer than your competitors.