§8.2 · Decisions Are Made Under Load

Clarity Beats Certainty

You don’t need to know the outcome to know how to act.

There’s a myth in leadership, and in lifting, that success comes from always having the right answer. That if you just gather enough data, wait long enough, or plan hard enough, certainty will arrive and carry you through.

But the best teams, the best lifters, the best products — they don’t run on certainty. They run on clarity.

You see it clearly in moments of disruption. In early 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic rewrote every assumption about business, teams that waited for complete information froze. But the ones who moved quickly didn’t do it recklessly. They did it with intention.

  • Zoom opened up free access to educators worldwide. Daily meeting participants skyrocketed from 10 million in December 2019 to 300 million by April 2020.
  • Peloton overhauled its entire supply chain when demand outpaced capacity. By Q4 2020 it reported 232% year-over-year revenue growth and added over 1 million new subscribers.
  • Notion refocused messaging for the remote work moment. Its user base grew from 1 million to over 4 million in 2020.

None of them knew how long the shift would last. But they had clarity of mission. That clarity became a compass.

This is the same clarity that high-level lifters use when training with RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion). Instead of sticking to a fixed number on the bar, they assess how each set feels in real time. On some days, that means pulling back to preserve recovery. On others, it means pushing heavier than planned.

It’s not guesswork. It’s informed adaptation. It’s clarity in action, even when conditions change.

This is where the OODA Loop earns its place. We met it in Chapter 1: Observe, Orient, Decide, Act. The point isn’t perfection — it’s momentum. You act, assess, and adjust faster than the environment can overwhelm you.

This model doesn’t just apply to military operations. It applies to product releases, user feedback, platform incidents, and even organizational change. You’re not waiting for every signal to align. You’re moving with awareness, grounded in your principles, and fast enough to respond before inertia sets in.

And this is where clarity beats certainty.

  • Certainty waits.
  • Clarity prepares.
  • Certainty asks, “Are we sure?”
  • Clarity says, “Here’s what we do next.”

You don’t always need a perfect map if you’ve trained your compass.

Let’s be honest: Agile is a loaded word.

Some teams swear by it. Others roll their eyes. And more often than not, the problem isn’t with the philosophy. It’s with the implementation.

Too many teams have had Agile forced on them by someone who read a textbook but never wrote a line of code. The rituals become rigid. The flexibility becomes performative. And the spirit gets lost in the ceremony.

I’m a firm believer in the Agile mindset, but not the dogmatic, by-the-book version. True agility means responding quickly to new information. It means iteration with intent. But that only works if the team has clarity. Without it, Agile devolves into a flurry of half-finished tickets, context switches, and directionless pivots.

The point was never to abandon focus. The point was to stay mission-aligned, laser-focused on the “why,” while remaining flexible on the “how.”

Where I most often see Agile fail is when it becomes a cover for indecision. When teams confuse agility with ambiguity. When the lack of a clear goal gets labeled as “keeping our options open.”

I also see it fail when people demand certainty before committing to action. Even today, with more data than ever before, certainty is rare. We have telemetry, user interviews, funnel analysis, Salesforce records, analyst feedback. But the decision on what to build next is still more art than science.

If there was a playbook to follow, we’d be project managers. But we’re product managers.

Our craft isn’t in perfect foresight. It’s in translating user pain into progress. It’s in surfacing the “why” beneath the “what.” It’s in seeing the pattern behind the request.

And as Nathaniel Fick wrote in One Bullet Away, his memoir about the transformation from Ivy League student to Marine officer leading combat missions in Afghanistan and Iraq:

“Complex ideas must be made simple, or they’ll remain ideas and never be put into action.”

That’s our job. To take everything we know — the signals, the inputs, the intuition — and turn it into action. Not after a perfect analysis. Not when every detail is known. But when it’s time to move.

We do that not by being certain, but by being clear.

Clear on the mission. Clear on the user. Clear on what matters most right now.

Because clarity moves. Certainty stalls.

And in the fog of delivery, feedback, and shifting priorities, the job is not to predict perfectly. It’s to navigate intentionally.