Begin by listing decisions you make repeatedly that rarely affect revenue, risk, or reputation in a measurable way. Consider frequency, reversibility, and cost of delay. If something occurs daily, takes minutes, and is easy to undo, capture it for delegation or automation. Write a short rule, attach an expected outcome, and set an exception trigger. The clarity converts uncertainty into processable work that no longer burdens your attention or steals creative momentum.
Adopt a straightforward heuristic: if a recurring choice can be resolved within two minutes using a known rule, do not spend precious judgment cycles on it. Automate with a filter, template, or script, or route it to someone prepared with context. If it exceeds two minutes, escalate its handling or document the missing rule. Over time, more cases slide onto the escalator, leaving your mind available for the judgments only you can make.
Use the 80/20 lens to identify the small set of choices generating most value, and protect them. For everything else, apply a simple regret test: will I still care about this decision in a week? If not, codify it. When possible, prefer options that minimize downside rather than optimize tiny upside. These quick tests prevent overthinking, and they gently push low-stakes paths into documented routines that anyone, or anything, can execute with confidence.