We hear this idea often.
And yet, many teams still operate as if everything needs to be done now.
Every request feels critical.
Every task is marked as high priority.
Every issue demands immediate attention.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth:
When everything is urgent, prioritization stops working.
Not everything should be urgent
In many teams, it’s common to hear:
“Can we prioritize this?”
“This is urgent”
“Let’s handle this as soon as possible”
But if everything is treated with urgency…
What actually defines priority?
Urgency should not be the default.
It should be intentional.
The real problem: lack of prioritization
The biggest issue is not urgency.
It’s this question:
“Do we know what truly matters right now?”
When that’s not clear:
- Teams jump between tasks
- Focus is constantly interrupted
- Work becomes reactive instead of strategic
- Important work gets delayed by “urgent” noise
As management thinker Peter Drucker emphasized:
There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.
When urgency becomes a broken signal
There’s another layer to this.
As described by Goodhart’s Law:
“When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.”
When urgency becomes the default label for work:
- Everything starts to look urgent
- Priority signals get distorted
- Teams lose the ability to distinguish what truly matters
Urgency stops being useful.
It becomes noise.
When urgency becomes a system problem
Excessive urgency is rarely about the work itself.
It usually points to:
- Lack of clear priorities
- Weak product or business direction
- Poor backlog management
- Difficulty saying “not now”
Urgency becomes a habit — not a decision.
The cost of constant urgency
Operating in a constant state of urgency leads to:
- Context switching
- Shallow execution
- Increased stress
- Lower quality deliveries
Teams stay busy…
…but meaningful progress slows down.
What high-performing teams do differently
Strong teams don’t eliminate urgency.
They protect it.
Urgency is reserved for:
- Production incidents
- Critical failures
- Time-sensitive opportunities
Everything else is handled with clarity and prioritization.
A more mature way to think
Instead of asking:
“How fast can we do this?”
Start asking:
“Is this truly urgent — or just important?”
Because those are not the same.
Final thought
Urgency should be rare.
If everything is urgent, your team is not fast.
It’s reactive.
And reactive teams don’t scale.
References / Further Reading
Management
- The Effective Executive — Peter Drucker
- Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices — Peter Drucker
Product & Prioritization
- Inspired — Marty Cagan
- Empowered — Marty Cagan
Economics & Systems Thinking
- Goodhart’s Law — Charles Goodhart
Top comments (0)