A single bad moment gets filed away as a permanent verdict on who someone is.
WHAT THIS MEANS
One weak presentation, one missed deadline, one bad week: it becomes the file. Not a data point inside a longer story, but the whole story. The mind treats that early moment as settled fact, then reads everything after it as confirmation rather than new information.
The verdict feels earned because it was based on something real. That’s exactly why it never gets revisited.
WHERE THIS SHOWS UP
The project sheet has a column called “not ready.” A name went into it after one shaky presentation months ago, and it never left. New rounds get planned, the sheet gets updated, that name stays where it was first put, like the column is permanent instead of a snapshot from one afternoon.
Handing off the next project means picking someone, and the same colleague comes to mind, then gets passed over again. There’s a pause before the decision, a flicker of “maybe,” before the safer, more proven choice gets picked instead. It happens fast enough to not feel like a decision at all.
Scrolling back through an old message thread turns up a note from months ago, blunt and a little impatient, written about someone who seemed stuck at the time. Reading it now, next to what that person has actually done since, the gap is obvious. The note hasn’t changed. The person has.
RECOGNITION MOMENTS
#NeverMovingTheirNameOffTheList
#PickingSomeoneSaferForTheNextProject
#ScrollingBackAndSeeingHowFarTheyveCome
RECOGNITION STATES
#CertainButMaybeWrong
#JudgingByTheLastThingISaw
Deepen the Perspective
Before The Advantage Shows
What if a new product’s real advantage hasn’t shown up yet and you’re already writing it off? “A lot of times you don’t know what your competitive advantage is when you launch a new product.” — STEVE JOBS (mit)
Fear’s Fixed Answer
Something inside you draws a line this is possible, this isn’t and then it just… stays there. “He who has overcome his fears will truly be free.” — ARISTOTLE
What Price Doesn’t Say
Price is the fast answer. Value is the one you have to sit with a little longer. “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” — WARREN BUFFET
THE HIDDEN ASSUMPTION
The First-Draft Verdict The assumption is that a person’s first weak moment reveals their ceiling, when it usually only reveals where they started.
THE SHIFT
A second look at someone written off after one weak moment usually finds them further along than the file shows. The record has kept moving. The file rarely gets reopened to notice.
WHAT THIS IS NOT SAYING
This doesn’t mean ignoring red flags or trusting everyone regardless of what they actually do. A longer view isn’t a blindfold. It still takes in current behavior, current results, current patterns.
What changes is the size of the sample. One moment stops being treated as the whole record, and more time gets counted before a verdict gets fixed in place.
The mix-up happens because vigilance and a longer view can look identical from the outside. Both involve watching someone closely. The difference is whether one bad data point closes the file or simply gets added to it.
LIMITS & OBJECTIONS
The concern is real: if judgment on current behavior gets dropped entirely, there’s no way to protect a team from someone who genuinely isn’t changing. That worry is fair. Patterns exist for a reason, and ignoring them isn’t patience, it’s risk.
A longer view doesn’t mean waiting forever. It means the timeline for judgment gets set by actual, repeated behavior, not by a single early impression that gets treated as final on day one.
This breaks down when “longer view” becomes a permanent excuse, when every new instance of the same problem gets absorbed into “still waiting to see” instead of being counted as more evidence.
The competing principle is protection: a team or a working relationship needs enough certainty to make decisions now, not just eventually. Patience and accountability aren’t opposites, but they do pull in different directions, and neither one gets to cancel the other out completely.
USE THIS QUOTE FOR
#BeforeAssigningTheNextRound #WhenAnOldNoteGetsReread
#JournalForAColleagueYouveQuietlyWrittenOff
#ThePauseBeforePassingSomeoneOverAgain
#DuringMidYearPeopleReviews