ISSUE 023 • The Cost of Waiting

Executive Brief • July 17, 2026 • Two Miles Advisory

Executive Perspective

Every business owner has delayed a decision.

Waiting for more information.

Waiting for the market.

Waiting until next quarter.

Waiting until things "settle down."

Sometimes waiting is wise.

Often...

It's expensive.

Every delayed hire places additional pressure on your team.

Every postponed pricing adjustment erodes margin.

Every unresolved customer issue weakens trust.

Every outdated process quietly consumes time.

Indecision has a cost.

It rarely appears on the financial statements.

But it shows up in slower growth.

Higher stress.

Missed opportunities.

And exhausted leaders.

Great business owners don't make reckless decisions.

They make informed decisions.

Then they move.

Because progress almost always comes from action—not perfection.

Waiting doesn't eliminate risk.

Sometimes...

It becomes the biggest risk of all.

Boardroom Question

What important decision have you been postponing?

What is it costing you every week you delay it?

Lost revenue?

Lost time?

Lost momentum?

Lost confidence?

Sometimes the price of waiting is far greater than the price of acting.

One Better Decision

Write down one business decision you've avoided.

Ask yourself three questions.

  • What facts do I already know?

  • What information am I still waiting for?

  • Will that information truly change my decision?

If not...

Decide.

Momentum often begins with one courageous decision.

CFO Insight

Delayed decisions often become expensive decisions.

About Two Miles Daily

Two Miles Daily is a daily executive briefing from Two Miles Advisory, delivering practical insights on leadership, finance, operations, and business strategy for entrepreneurs and growing businesses.

Our mission is simple:

Help business owners make one better decision every day.

Think Like a CEO. Decide Like a CFO. Build Like an Owner.

Published by Two Miles Advisory

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ISSUE 024 • The Tyranny of Urgency

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ISSUE 022 • Busy Doesn't Mean Productive