Site icon David Ezell

If a task isn’t driving revenue or efficiency, it’s not a priority

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Lacy talked about spending hours designing homepage visuals in the early days of Willow… only for the final version to never even make it live.

That’s when the lesson hit hard: being perfect isn’t what moves a business forward. Revenue does. Efficiency does. Clarity does.

That one hit home for me as a designer.

I spent years obsessing over pixel-perfect visuals — adjusting spacing by 2px, reworking colors, moving type by half a line height. The things our eyes can’t ignore but our customers never even notice. And here’s the kicker: those hours felt productive, but they were actually a delay tactic disguised as craftsmanship.

At some point in your business, you realize:

  • Perfect branding won’t save a product no one is paying for.

  • Stunning design can’t outperform unclear messaging.

  • Crisp visuals mean nothing if you’re sprinting toward the wrong goal.

Lacy put it simply: the work that matters is the work that creates revenue or creates efficiency. Everything else is ego… or fear… or procrastination wearing a beautiful outfit.

Ok, so now what?

Use deadlines as your discipline.
You don’t ship when it’s perfect — you ship when it’s due.

Deadlines force clarity:

  • What absolutely needs to get done to deliver value?

  • What will actually move money or momentum?

  • What can wait because it’s nice-to-have, not necessary?

Perfectionists don’t lack skill — they lack constraints.

Constraints are how businesses grow.

So this week, try Lacy’s filter and a designer’s deadline together:

Does this drive revenue or efficiency?
Can I ship it as-is by Friday + iterate after?

Focus is a financial strategy.
Shipping is a growth strategy.
Iteration—not perfection—is the entrepreneur’s craft.

Let’s get to it.

Feel free to share with someone who needs it.
Also be sure to listen to Lacy’s full episode ↓
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