
Rule No. 50 summary:
When the tough decision is inevitable, stop stalling. Stop dressing it up. Go straight at it.
Half-measures just prolong the pain and erode your credibility. In business, youâll occasionally have to do something unpleasantâfire a friend, shut down a product, take a public hit. Dragging it out or sugarcoating it only makes it worse. Swallow hard, take the full bite, and move on. Fast, direct action beats slow, âpoliteâ decay.
The pain is coming either way. Swallow it whole, take the hit, and move forward.
Thereâs no elegant way to make a hard decision hurt lessâso stop trying. Dragging your feet, softening the blow, or easing into the inevitable doesnât make you a thoughtful leader; it makes you a coward in slow motion. Anything less drains your credibility, poisons morale, and signals weakness when strength is needed most. Leaders donât get paid to flinch. They get paid to finish.
If youâve fought battles that became lessons â this is where we collect them.
The insight you share might be the turning point someone else is waiting for.
Write this down
When the hard decision is obvious, delaying it only makes it worse.


đ Recommended Reading
The Hard Thing About Hard Things
by Ben Horowitz
âThere are no silver bullets for this, only lead bullets.â
â Ben Horowitz
đBook Summary
Ben Horowitz doesnât romanticize leadership. He tells the truth: running a company is messy, lonely, and full of problems no textbook prepares you for. The book walks through the brutal realities of building, fixing, and leading organizationsâlayoffs, near-death cash situations, firing friends, making irreversible decisions, and managing your own psychology while everything around you burns. Horowitz doesnât offer quick fixes or corporate clichĂŠs; he gives practical, battle-tested guidance forged in crisis. The message is simple: the hardest part of leadership isnât the strategyâit’s having the stomach to do what must be done when you least feel like doing it.
Key Executive Takeaway
The job doesnât get easierâyou get stronger.
Great leaders arenât defined by perfect plans or genius insights. Theyâre defined by their willingness to face the hardest problems directly, make the decision no one else wants to make, and keep going long after comfort and certainty have left the room.
đ ď¸ WE ARE STILL BUILDING THIS RULE. CHECK BACK
This Rule isnât finishedâand it never will be. Business changes, leaders learn, and our Members keep sharpening the edges with real stories and hard-won lessons. What you see here is todayâs version. Tomorrowâs will be better, clearer, and backed by more lived experience.
Thank you for being here and bringing your perspectiveâadd your insight, share a story, or challenge whatâs written. Together, we keep these Rules alive and relevant.