The doorknob decision | The Western Producer

Most leaders don’t miss opportunities because they can’t see the door. They miss them because they won’t turn the doorknob.

I’ve been there, facing a solid door with a simple handle, thoughts looping in my head. The loop feels like strategy, but it’s chatter. The moment of truth isn’t the walk to the door — it’s the reach, the twist and the step through.

The loop is analysis, second-guessing and blame. It sounds sophisticated, but it keeps you in motion without progress. It’s endless hallway pacing: more data, more advice, one more planning scenario.

The knob is simple. It’s a choice you can make right now with the information you already have.

Most small business leaders aren’t short on options, they’re short on ownership. Turning the knob says, “I own my next move.” That’s uncomfortable, because once you turn it, the hallway disappears.

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A wooden arrow with "Succession Planning" written on it sits on a desk next to a laptop and above it are two other, smaller arrows that point from the bust of one person to the bust of another and then to a third.

But so does the loop.

Fear doesn’t always say something. It hides under respectable labels:

  • “Due diligence.” You’ve done enough. Now you’re stalling.
  • “Team alignment.” You’re seeking permission to avoid accountability.
  • “Perfect timing.” You’re waiting for certainties no leader ever gets.

Here’s the test: If you stripped away fear, would the decision be clear? If yes, you don’t have a knowledge problem, you have a courage problem.

Owning the decision isn’t bravado, it’s clarity: I will be the one who chooses, learns and adjusts.

Here are five moves to help you turn that doorknob:

  • Name the door. State the decision in one sentence. “Hire the ops lead by March 1.” If you can’t name it, you can’t turn it.
  • Name the fear. Write the sentence you don’t want to say out loud, for example, “I’m afraid I’ll choose wrong and waste money.”
  • Narrow the bet. Define the smallest meaningful version of the move, for example, budget, time or scope.
  • Set the review. Put a date on the calendar for when you’ll evaluate, e.g., “April 30: keep, adjust or exit.”
  • Turn the knob in public. Tell your team about the decision, the rationale and the review date. Ownership shows leadership.

Do you notice what’s missing? Guarantees — but you don’t need them. What you need is a clear move and a clear review.

If you get stuck, try this 10-minute exercise:

  • 2 minutes: Write the decision and the fear.
  • 3 minutes: List only the facts you know today.
  • 3 minutes: Define the smallest meaningful bet and your review date.
  • 2 minutes: Draft the announcement to your team.

Then turn the knob before you rewrite the draft. Doorknob turns are specific, time-bound and owned. Action first, refinement after.

You don’t need fear to drive urgency, and you don’t need control to create consistency. You need clarity and commitment. Turning the knob is how you move from reacting in the hallway to leading through the door.

Source: producer.com

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