Procrastination has a reputation problem. We treat it like a character flaw, but what if some procrastination is actually the smartest move you can make? In this episode, Joel and Hannah borrow a framework from Dungeons & Dragons to map out four distinct types of procrastination. Once you know the difference, you can start being strategic about not just what you do, but when.
Key Takeaways
- Lawful Good: Strategic Delay Is a Productivity Tool. Proactively putting something off—like waiting to give feedback until the timing is right or deferring a goal until you have bandwidth—is actually a form of good planning. This productivity strategy is wildly underused and incredibly simple.
- Lawful Evil: Just Because You Can Doesn't Mean You Should. This form of procrastination creates real harm for others, even if it’s technically in bounds. We’ve all done it: punting a meeting when everyone else is ready, sitting on a decision that affects your team, or RSVPing "maybe" when you know it's a no. You might not be footing the bill, but someone else is.
- Chaotic Good: Save Room for the Magic. Some people do their absolute best thinking on the edge of a deadline. That last-minute brilliance is real, but it causes ripples. The move isn't to eliminate it; it's to build in runway, communicate proactively, and keep it to a mindful minimum so the magic doesn't become a mess.
- Chaotic Evil: The Kind That Costs You. Some procrastination is reactive, avoidant, and genuinely harmful to others and to your future self. It includes: sitting on resentment until it explodes, ignoring the check-engine light on your body, not responding to a message until the relationship just quietly fades. This one deserves to be taken more seriously than most people take it.
- It's Not Just What You Do, But When. Getting strategic about timing, not just tasks, is what sets you up for a different kind of success. The Full Focus Planner's monthly calendar is a practical starting point for sequencing decisions and creating the margin you need to do your best work.
Watch on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/yKvGXP4jioc
This episode was produced by Sarah Vorhees Wendel of VW Sound