The difference between reacting fast and deciding well
One of the quiet traps leaders fall into right now is mistaking speed for clarity.
Decisions arrive quickly.
Information updates constantly.
AI summaries refresh by the hour.
So the instinct is to move fast, respond quickly, stay ahead.
But reacting fast and deciding well are not the same thing.
I see this most often when leaders say, “We didn’t hesitate. We just moved.”
What they usually mean is that they acted before the decision had a chance to settle.
Reaction is driven by stimulus.
Decision is shaped by judgement.
Reaction asks, what just happened and how do we respond?
Decision asks, what is actually being asked of us now?
That distinction matters more than ever.
In environments shaped by constant updates, fast data, and AI-accelerated insight, leaders are surrounded by signals. Some are meaningful. Many are noise. Reacting fast can feel decisive, but it often leads to rework, confusion, and fatigue when the conditions shift again.
Deciding well is different.
It involves pausing just long enough to understand how a decision will behave once it leaves the room. Who it will affect first. Where it will create pressure. What assumptions it relies on. And what might change before the consequences fully land.
This is what I mean by working with Immediate Futures – paying attention to what a decision sets in motion straight away, not just where it is meant to lead.
https://www.morrismisel.com/the-misel-method/
That pause is not hesitation.
It is preparation.
This is where foresight becomes practical. Not foresight as prediction, but foresight as a discipline of judgement that helps leaders frame decisions so they hold, even as information updates and circumstances evolve.
https://www.morrismisel.com/foresight-discipline-of-judgement-morris-misel/
When leaders do this well, they don’t need to constantly reverse course. They adjust without losing coherence. They notice the ripple effects early, while there is still room to respond rather than repair.
https://www.morrismisel.com/the-misel-method/
The leaders who cope best with speed are not the fastest reactors.
They are the best framers.
They separate urgency from importance.
They resist the pressure to respond to every update.
They design decisions so they can absorb change without breaking.
This becomes especially important in AI-shaped environments. When systems surface options instantly, the temptation is to choose quickly. But AI accelerates information, not wisdom. Human judgement is still required to decide what deserves action now, what can wait, and what needs reframing altogether.
Reacting fast often feels productive in the moment.
Deciding well feels calmer, even under pressure.
Over time, teams feel the difference.
When leaders react, work whiplashes.
When leaders decide well, work steadies.
Meetings become clearer.
Fewer decisions are reopened.
People understand not just what was decided, but why.
This is not about slowing organisations down.
It is about preventing unnecessary acceleration in the wrong direction.
The leaders I work with are not trying to become more cautious. They are trying to become more deliberate. They want decisions that survive contact with reality, not just the morning’s information.
Deciding well in the immediate is how leaders protect the inhabitable futures they are responsible for.
Choose Forward.
#strategicforesight #decisionmaking #futureleadership #ImmediateFutures #RippleEffects #inhabitablefutures #ChooseForward