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Why Procrastination is Good for You

In a new book, University of San Diego professor Frank Partnoy argues that the key to success is waiting for the last possible moment to make a decision

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  • By Megan Gambino
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Wait The Art and Science of Delay Frank Partnoy
In his new book, Wait: The Art and Science of Delay, Frank Partnoy claims that when faced with a decision, we should assess how long we have to make it, and then wait until the last possible moment to do so. (Book jacket: Courtesy of Pete Garceau; Portrait: Courtesy of Fergus Greer)

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Wait: The Art and Science of Delay

by Frank Partnoy

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Sometimes life seems to happen at warp speed. But, decisions, says Frank Partnoy, should not. When the financial market crashed in 2008, the former investment banker and corporate lawyer, now a professor of finance and law and co-director of the Center for Corporate and Securities Law at the University of San Diego, turned his attention to literature on decision-making.

“Much recent research about decisions helps us understand what we should do or how we should do it, but it says little about when,” he says.

In his new book, Wait: The Art and Science of Delay, Partnoy claims that when faced with a decision, we should assess how long we have to make it, and then wait until the last possible moment to do so. Should we take his advice on how to “manage delay,” we will live happier lives.

It is not surprising that the author of a book titled Wait is a self-described procrastinator. In what ways do you procrastinate?

I procrastinate in just about every possible way and always have, since my earliest memories going back to when I first starting going to elementary school and had these arguments with my mother about making my bed.

My mom would ask me to make my bed before going to school. I would say, no, because I didn’t see the point of making my bed if I was just going to sleep in it again that night. She would say, well, we have guests coming over at 6 o’clock, and they might come upstairs and look at your room. I said, I would make my bed when we know they are here. I want to see a car in the driveway. I want to hear a knock on the door. I know it will take me about one minute to make my bed so at 5:59, if they are here, I will make my bed.

I procrastinated all through college and law school. When I went to work at Morgan Stanley, I was delighted to find that although the pace of the trading floor is frenetic and people are very fast, there were lots of incredibly successful mentors of procrastination.

Now, I am an academic. As an academic, procrastination is practically a job requirement. If I were to say I would be submitting an academic paper by September 1, and I submitted it in August, people would question my character.

It has certainly been drilled into us that procrastination is a bad thing. Yet, you argue that we should embrace it. Why?

Historically, for human beings, procrastination has not been regarded as a bad thing. The Greeks and Romans generally regarded procrastination very highly. The wisest leaders embraced procrastination and would basically sit around and think and not do anything unless they absolutely had to.

The idea that procrastination is bad really started in the Puritanical era with Jonathan Edwards’s sermon against procrastination and then the American embrace of “a stitch in time saves nine,” and this sort of work ethic that required immediate and diligent action.

But if you look at recent studies, managing delay is an important tool for human beings. People are more successful and happier when they manage delay. Procrastination is just a universal state of being for humans. We will always have more things to do than we can possibly do, so we will always be imposing some sort of unwarranted delay on some tasks. The question is not whether we are procrastinating, it is whether we are procrastinating well.


Sometimes life seems to happen at warp speed. But, decisions, says Frank Partnoy, should not. When the financial market crashed in 2008, the former investment banker and corporate lawyer, now a professor of finance and law and co-director of the Center for Corporate and Securities Law at the University of San Diego, turned his attention to literature on decision-making.

“Much recent research about decisions helps us understand what we should do or how we should do it, but it says little about when,” he says.

In his new book, Wait: The Art and Science of Delay, Partnoy claims that when faced with a decision, we should assess how long we have to make it, and then wait until the last possible moment to do so. Should we take his advice on how to “manage delay,” we will live happier lives.

It is not surprising that the author of a book titled Wait is a self-described procrastinator. In what ways do you procrastinate?

I procrastinate in just about every possible way and always have, since my earliest memories going back to when I first starting going to elementary school and had these arguments with my mother about making my bed.

My mom would ask me to make my bed before going to school. I would say, no, because I didn’t see the point of making my bed if I was just going to sleep in it again that night. She would say, well, we have guests coming over at 6 o’clock, and they might come upstairs and look at your room. I said, I would make my bed when we know they are here. I want to see a car in the driveway. I want to hear a knock on the door. I know it will take me about one minute to make my bed so at 5:59, if they are here, I will make my bed.

I procrastinated all through college and law school. When I went to work at Morgan Stanley, I was delighted to find that although the pace of the trading floor is frenetic and people are very fast, there were lots of incredibly successful mentors of procrastination.

Now, I am an academic. As an academic, procrastination is practically a job requirement. If I were to say I would be submitting an academic paper by September 1, and I submitted it in August, people would question my character.

It has certainly been drilled into us that procrastination is a bad thing. Yet, you argue that we should embrace it. Why?

Historically, for human beings, procrastination has not been regarded as a bad thing. The Greeks and Romans generally regarded procrastination very highly. The wisest leaders embraced procrastination and would basically sit around and think and not do anything unless they absolutely had to.

The idea that procrastination is bad really started in the Puritanical era with Jonathan Edwards’s sermon against procrastination and then the American embrace of “a stitch in time saves nine,” and this sort of work ethic that required immediate and diligent action.

But if you look at recent studies, managing delay is an important tool for human beings. People are more successful and happier when they manage delay. Procrastination is just a universal state of being for humans. We will always have more things to do than we can possibly do, so we will always be imposing some sort of unwarranted delay on some tasks. The question is not whether we are procrastinating, it is whether we are procrastinating well.

When does it cross from good to bad?

Some scientists have argued that there are two kinds of procrastination: active procrastination and passive procrastination. Active procrastination means you realize that you are unduly delaying mowing the lawn or cleaning your closet, but you are doing something that is more valuable instead. Passive procrastination is just sitting around on your sofa not doing anything. That clearly is a problem.

What made you want to take a closer look at the timing of decisions?

I interviewed a number of former senior executives at Lehman Brothers and discovered a remarkable story. Lehman Brothers had arranged for a decision-making class in the fall of 2005 for its senior executives. It brought four dozen executives to the Palace Hotel on Madison Avenue and brought in leading decision researchers, including Max Bazerman from Harvard and Mahzarin Banaji, a well-known psychologist. For the capstone lecture, they brought in Malcolm Gladwell, who had just published Blink, a book that speaks to the benefits of making instantaneous decisions and that Gladwell sums up as “a book about those first two seconds.” Lehman’s president Joe Gregory embraced this notion of going with your gut and deciding quickly, and he passed copies of Blink out on the trading floor.

The executives took this class and then hurriedly marched back to their headquarters and proceeded to make the worst snap decisions in the history of financial markets. I wanted to explore what was wrong with that lesson and to create something that would be the course that Wall Street should have taken and hopefully will take.

You looked beyond business to decision-making in sports, comedy, medicine, military strategy, even dating. What did you find?

I was so surprised to find that this two-step process that I learned from arguing with my mother about making my bed is actually a process that is used by successful decision makers in all aspects of life and in all sorts of time frames. It is used by professional athletes at the level of milliseconds. It is used by the military at the level of minutes. It is used by professional dating services at the level of about an hour.

Question one is: what is the longest amount of time I can take before doing this? What time world am I living in? Step two is, delay the response or the decision until the very last possible moment. If it is a year, wait 364 days. If it’s an hour, wait 59 minutes.

For example, a professional tennis player has about 500 milliseconds to return a serve. A tennis court is 78 feet baseline-to-baseline, and professional tennis serves come in at well over 100 miles per hour. Most of us would say that a professional tennis player is better than an amateur because they are so fast. But, in fact, what I found and what the studies of superfast athletes show is that they are better because they are slow. They are able to perfect their stroke and response to free up as much time as possible between the actual service of the ball and the last possible millisecond when they have to return it.

The international dating service It’s Just Lunch advocates that clients not look at photos, because photos lead to snap reactions that just take milliseconds. It asks that they consciously not make judgments about a person when they first meet them. Instead, they tell clients to go to lunch, wait until the last possible moment, and then at the end of lunch just answer one question: Would I like to go out on a second date with this person? In the same way it frees up time for a tennis player to wait a few extra milliseconds, someone on a date will make a better decision if they free up extra minutes to observe and process information.

What else surprised you?

Most people are taught that you should apologize right away. But I was surprised to find that, in most cases, delayed apologies are more effective. If you’ve wronged a spouse or partner or colleague in some substantive, intentional way, they will want time to process information about what you’ve done. If you acknowledge what you did, and delay the apology, then the wronged party has a chance to tell you how they feel in response, and your apology is much more meaningful.

Do you have any practical advice for how people can learn to better manage delay?

Just take a breath. Take more pauses. Stare off into the distance. Ask yourself the first question of this two-step process: What is the maximum amount of time I have available to respond? When I get emails now, instead of responding right away, I ask myself this. It might seem rude, and it did feel rude at first. But the reality is if you respond to every email instantaneously you are going to make your life much more difficult. If the email really doesn’t have to be responded to for a week, I simply cut the information out of the email and paste it into my calendar for one week from today. I free up time today that I can spend on something else, and I’ll be unconsciously working on the question asked in the email for a week.

[Editor’s Note: It took him three hours to respond to an email of mine. He wrote, rather tongue-in-cheek, “so sorry for the delay!”]

How do we stand to benefit from your message?

If we are going to resolve long-term issues like climate change and sustainability, and if we are going to preserve the innovative focus of private institutions, I think we need a shift in mindset away from snap reactions toward delay. Innovation goes at a glacial pace and should go at a glacial pace.

Epiphany stories are generally not true. Isaac Newton did not have an apple fall on his head. Thomas Edison didn’t suddenly discover the light bulb. Tim Berners-Lee didn’t suddenly invent the World Wide Web. If we are going to be able to resolve long-term problems, we need to create new structures where groups of people are given long periods of time without time pressure and can think in a think tank like way. We will give them a real deadline so they can’t just dither, but I think we need to press our decision-making framework out of the 24-hour news cycle and out of the election cycle into a longer-term time frame of maybe a decade.

What is your next big question?

I am intrigued by epistemology and the question of how we know what we know and the limitations on knowledge. There is an idea circling around the back of my brain. But I am going to take the medicine I advise other people to take, and wait. Let it sit and brew.

This interview series focuses on big thinkers. Without knowing whom I will interview next, only that he or she will be a big thinker in their field, what question do you have for my next interview subject?

I would like to know how your subject knows what they know. What is it about their research and experience and background that leads them to a degree of certainty about their views? With what degree of confidence do they hold that idea? Is it 100 percent? Is it 99 percent? Is it 90 percent?

From my last interviewee, evolutionary biologist Sergey Gavrilets: What would you like to have more opportunity to do or more time to do if you had the chance?

I would like to have more time to play golf, actually. I often have my best creative breakthroughs, to the extent I have them at all, on the golf course—when I have a period of five hours to be around grass and trees with a straightforward but maddening task to occupy me.


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Comments (25)

It's good to know my laziness is paying off. I haven't actually read the whole article yet, I'll probably do it later.

Posted by Mike on January 31,2013 | 06:48 PM

I do this all the time.

Posted by anonymous on January 9,2013 | 08:15 PM

This is book I will definitely be buying my son for Christmas! Time to think is a good thing as sometime we can rush ahead and be too action orientated. However, there can be a pattern to the way people procrastinate which can cause personal frustration, the feeling of being stuck and useless particularly when goals don't get achieved. I've written an article helping people to identify whether there is a pattern to their procrastination and what they can do about it http://bit.ly/SVqpea.

Posted by Elizabeth Conley on December 8,2012 | 01:21 PM

Debatable theory.

Posted by Sam on October 14,2012 | 06:51 AM

Thanks for your great information, the contents are quiet interesting.I will be waiting for your next post.

Posted by vivek on October 8,2012 | 01:59 PM

It seems to me that a lot of this article is based on redefinitions of words. "Passive procrastination" is what most of us think procrastination is. "Active procrastination" is simply careful consideration of a topic; it only becomes procrastination if snap decisions are considered the norm. What seems not to be considered is that procrastination (including the "active" sort) often leads to snap decisions. If a decision waits until the last possible moment, panic can set in. We see this with drivers trying to turn left onto a busy road. They wait fearfully for a while, missing good chances, then panic and turn right into traffic. I don't know how many bad decisions I have seen based on last-minute panic caused by procrastination.

Posted by Richard Spilman on August 14,2012 | 01:03 PM

Cervantes wrote: we have to give time to time.

Posted by Sanchez on August 11,2012 | 11:28 AM

British author Somerset Maughm wrote, in one of his short stories, that if a new author with a new book gained wild popularity, that he would wait a year and then decide whether to read it or not. If the book was still being discussed, or if he was still thinking about it and curious, then it was more likely to be worthwhile. Otherwise, it was just fashionable or trendy trash.

Posted by Brent Cyca on August 4,2012 | 06:24 AM

Excellent piece that I agree with completely and enthusiastically!. One watchout though is - The act of delaying calls for some judgement and a decision on for e.g. what the right timeframe is (to respond or make a decision)... this from my experience challenges the best of us and we dont always get it right!.

Posted by Kamesh Rao on August 1,2012 | 10:07 PM

Mark Twain (or was it Ben Franklin?): "Never out off until tomorrow what you can put off until the day AFTER tomorrow."

Posted by Craig Umanoff on July 29,2012 | 04:42 PM

In general, I'm very much in favor of this philosophy. Taking time to let your brain get involved before you act or make decisions is a skill many people don't excercise or develop. However, I do feel the author isn't ackowledging the risks of this approach as he describes it. First, waiting a week to respond to an email has real pitfalls because others will assume you are not working on their project or worse, don't care and as a result will form judgements and be unprepared when you eventually do respond. Also, waiting until the very last possible second can have real drawbacks because as new surprises surface that take priority, you'll miss the deadline of the aforementioned item - which can cause major issues. Again, I like the overall philosophy but my sense is that he hasn't really thought it through for day-to-day application.

Posted by E.M. Wynter on July 18,2012 | 01:02 PM

I am 68 and have been procastinating my whole life and always felt guilty about it, how nice to know it is maybe a good thing,,,I know many of my decisions after have been the best..

Posted by ginger on July 18,2012 | 12:14 PM

I put off reading this article but then after procrastinating I decided to read it. That was a mistake. What a simpleminded thesis.

Posted by Henry Man on July 18,2012 | 10:34 AM

claptrap and blather for the simple minded .

Posted by hank on July 18,2012 | 07:43 AM

I see that I am the first to respond with a comment. I waited until the impulse to comment had passed, but here it came anyway. I have been a proud procrastinator all my life except at this moment I chose to tell everyone that I feel vindicated by professor Partnoy's ethic.

Posted by Paul Warner on July 17,2012 | 09:14 AM

Yes--good decisions come out of letting things sit and "marinade" for a while. But too many institutions take comfort in the notion that they are deliberate and careful about how they effect change and the status quo should be jealously protected. The Penn State tragedy, the years of cover-up and protection of priests who were abusing children and the rot and racism that have been allowed to settle into the party of Lincoln call for swift, decisive action and a moral imperative that says "ACT NOW!" Procrastination can be and has been the father of too many lost and abused lives.

Posted by Dawn Morais Webster on July 16,2012 | 04:23 PM

Not all tasks benefit from waiting till the last possible moment to make a decision. The more that lower level tasks and decisions are deferred, the greater the chance they will impinge upon the amount of available time to make a higher order decision. Mow the lawn now, but take time to reflect before you invest.

Posted by John Gestwicki on July 16,2012 | 01:53 PM

Brilliant interview. I am very intrigued and this article just made me want to buy this book! I will, but first I'm going to put it on my Amazon wish list and wait for a little while -- say about 1 week -- before clicking purchase.

Posted by Peter Witte on July 16,2012 | 09:08 AM

While there are certainly opportunities that will not allow delay, I, too, am convinced that being "slow to speak" offers many benefits. For one, every moment you wait is a moment where something can happen that can change everything. Consider that a man asks a woman to marry him. She is not particularly drawn to him, but pauses thoughtfully. Then, during the wait, the television informs him that he has won the $340 million Powerball lottery. Had the woman responded too quickly, well.... On a real battlefield, a seemingly quick and decisive decision is found to be tragically wrong, all because some colonel thought that delay was for the weak. Another thing that delay allows is more time to collect and marshal information that can help you make a better decision. By waiting, you give the universe time to bring greater clarity to your direction. Lastly, sometimes delay makes it unnecessary to make a decision at all. If you can't decide whether to take Road A or Road B, and while waiting the bridge over Road B washes out, well, not only were perhaps spared from death, but now you can remove that from the pool of possible decisions. As someone wisely said, "Never do today what you can do tomorrow." Or, wait! Was it "Never do at all what you can afford to do tomorrow"? Thanks for a FASCINATING article!

Posted by Aaron Scott on July 15,2012 | 10:31 PM

Wait too long on that 100 mph serve and it's an ace...

Posted by Dennis Baker on July 15,2012 | 04:52 PM

Its quite intresting to know that procrastination can be classified. I am better informed in all aspects of the applications of time and opportunité. Thanks for the article.

Posted by Adegboyega Aremu on July 15,2012 | 03:40 PM

Good. Similarly, what did Mary do when the angel told her she would conceive a child through the power of the Holy Spirit and give birth to God’s Son? She pondered all these things in her heart! Always good to count to "10" before taking action... or "100" or more, until a desired comfort level is achieved.

Posted by Diane Mikrut on July 15,2012 | 02:33 PM

"...we need to create new structures where groups of people are given a long time to think..." some might say we have these - called universities. But perhaps lacking the right focus, sense of urgency or deadlines. I spend a good bit of time justifying basic research investments to senior military officers. That paragraph resonated well with me.. They live in the here and now, folks in Defense science operate in the 10-20 year time horizon but with focus, versus curiosity driven. Enjoyed the article - agree wholeheartedly, knowing when to make a decision is important, but a decision still needs to be made at some point. That challenges too many.

Posted by Doug Marble on July 15,2012 | 01:59 PM

Interesting subject. I have been a procastinator all my life and it mostly was a good idea. I didn't invest my retirement money whe I first retired or I would have lost 1/2 of it. Instead went in the bottom of the market and made money right away.2008 was a Low year. Somethings you can't delay such as medical care!

Posted by Laura Andrews on July 15,2012 | 12:51 PM

"...the key to success is waiting for the last possible moment to make a decision." The problem I have with this is that defining the "last possible moment" can vary between people, and in essence be too late in some cases. Also, when does the time spent on weighting your options become wasteful and end up costing you money?

Posted by Kathy on July 14,2012 | 12:10 PM



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