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⏳ The “Fast First Draft” Habit: Why Speed Comes From Iteration, Not Perfection
Most teams do not lose time because they type slowly. We lose time because we wait too long to start. Perfection feels responsible, but it often expands cycle time, increases rework, and quietly drains our attention. The fastest teams are not the ones who magically produce perfect work, they are the ones who produce something usable early, then iterate with feedback. If we want to get real time back, we need a new standard. Not “polished on the first try,” but “clear enough to react to quickly.” AI makes this shift practical because it compresses time-to-first-draft from hours to minutes. That changes everything about how work moves. ------------- The Time Leak We Rarely Name ------------- A lot of our workload is not truly “doing the work.” It is circling the work. We outline in our heads, we hesitate, we open five tabs, we reread the same paragraph, we tinker with the first sentence. We call it preparation, but often it is fear in a productivity costume. The result is that the real output starts late, and once it starts late, it has to be rushed. Here is what that looks like in everyday team life. Someone needs to write an important email, a proposal, a policy draft, a client update, a project brief, or a performance summary. Instead of creating a rough version quickly, they hold the whole thing in their head while trying to make it “right.” They delay sending it because they are still refining, and now the decision is delayed too. Handoff latency grows, meetings get scheduled to clarify what a draft could have clarified, and the whole workflow slows down. Then, because the draft arrives late, it does not get clean feedback. It gets reactive feedback. People skim it between calls. Stakeholders ask for changes without a shared baseline. The author patches the document, resends it, and we repeat the cycle. That is the hidden cost of perfectionism, not the quality standard, but the expanded time it takes to reach quality. When we build a “fast first draft” habit, we change the physics of collaboration. We create something visible early, we reduce ambiguity, and we allow the team to converge faster. That is the real time win.
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⏳ The “Fast First Draft” Habit: Why Speed Comes From Iteration, Not Perfection
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Quick Check In
It’s almost March. Be honest. Are you still going after the goals you set in January…or have you quietly adjusted them to feel more comfortable? This is the part of the year nobody talks about. The hype is gone. The excitement faded. Now it’s just discipline. At some point it stops being about motivation. It becomes about keeping your word to yourself. So I’ll ask you straight: Are you growing into who you said you wanted to become this year? 👇 Where are you at right now...crushing it, coasting, or recalibrating?
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The Best Free AI Got a MASSIVE Upgrade & More AI News You Can Use
This week, I break down some huge updates to Claude that, combined with the introduction of ads in ChatGPT, make Claude the best AI if you're on a free plan. Plus, I cover the barrage of OpenAI news and releases, discusses the evolution of the "OpenClaw" movement, and more. Enjoy!
🧪 Creativity at Speed, Using AI to Get to Better First Drafts Faster
Most of us think creativity takes time, and it does. But a lot of the time we associate with creativity is not the creative work itself. It is the slow start, the blank page, the wandering brainstorm, and the endless polishing that happens because we did not land the concept early. AI cannot replace taste, but it can dramatically reduce the time cost of getting to something we can shape. The real time win is not “AI makes us more creative.” The win is that AI reduces time-to-first-draft, compresses iteration cycles, and protects attention so we can spend our best hours on judgment, storytelling, and originality. ------------- Context: Why Creative Work Often Feels Like a Time Sink ------------- Creative work has a unique kind of friction. Even when we know what we need to produce, a post, a campaign concept, a training module, a deck, a new offer, we still have to find the angle. That search can take hours, and the search often happens in a messy way. We open a doc and write a few lines, delete them, write again, then check messages, then scroll examples, then start over. The work is not moving. We are paying the start-up cost again and again. That is context switching inside a single task, and it inflates the timeline. We also lose time because creative work is often reviewed subjectively. When the criteria are unclear, feedback becomes “I just don’t like it” or “it doesn’t feel right.” Then we revise without knowing what target we are aiming at. Rework skyrockets, and cycle time balloons. Another time leak is the “single-track draft.” We create one idea, invest heavily in it, and then defend it. When feedback arrives, we either collapse or scramble. This is slow because we treated the first attempt as precious. AI changes the economics of creative exploration. It makes drafts cheap. When drafts are cheap, we can explore more, choose faster, and refine with less emotional weight. That is how creativity becomes faster without becoming shallow. ------------- Insight 1: The Fastest Creative Teams Separate Generating From Choosing -------------
🧪 Creativity at Speed, Using AI to Get to Better First Drafts Faster
Does anyone else bicker with their GPT?
I do, then it punishes me by turning my quick email into a business plan then it over-delivers on my "one caption" like it’s trying to make up...... It's definitely a love/hate relationship!!! Please tell me I'm not alone!!
Does anyone else bicker with their GPT?
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