You can’t build anything real while faking momentum.
You know the game. Calendars filled with “quick catch-ups.” Decks polished for theatre. Endless updates dressed up as progress. Everyone looks active, but the work barely moves.
This isn’t work. This is performance. And it’s killing output.
I’ve seen this pattern too often in high-stakes environments: more meetings, more decks, more signalling, less actual movement. The work expands around visibility while the real decisions, fixes, and forward motion get delayed. That is not productivity. It is administrative theatre.
Hard Stats. Sharp Edge.
This is not just a feeling. It is structural.
- 71% of senior managers say meetings are “unproductive or inefficient.”
- The average exec? 23 hours a week spent on them. (Harvard Business Review)
- Interruptions and overcommunication inflate task times by 15–24%. (Microsoft Research)
That’s not workload — that’s waste.
A system optimised for visibility, not value.
The People Worth Backing Usually Ship
The people I trust are usually the ones who:
- Ship the ugly deck — because it’s the right take.
- Spot the issue before the standup happens.
- Drop the fix in the thread before the meeting invite lands.
- Iterate in real time — building muscle memory with every loop.
They are not waiting for perfect. They are not polishing for applause. They are moving the work while others are still staging it.
Sales Runs on the Same Principle
The real wins do not come from the smoothest presentation, they come from being early, being honest, delivering value first.
Every major programme I’ve closed, I’ve closed without waiting for the perfect moment or perfect message.
I understood the need. I dropped insight before anyone else.
And I did not bluff.
In sales, momentum beats polish. Every time.
How to Cut the Theatre
- If it is not tied to output, kill it.
- Circulate insight, not fluff.
- Do not CC for cover. Send to move the work.
- If there is no decision or delta from a meeting, bin it.
Stop chasing optics. Start chasing output.
Final Word
“You don’t rise by looking busy. You rise by being undeniable.”
Looking impressive is not the job. Moving something real is. Stop performing for the room. Deliver something that changes it.
Want more on systems thinking, scale-ready leadership, and architecting momentum? Stay connected. Follow along, reach out, or start a conversation — because building better businesses starts with finding the ones bold enough to rethink them.