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How to Make Better Decisions Under Pressure at Work
We all face decision-making in our lives.
But at work, it often happens under pressure - quickly, with incomplete information, and with the expectation that you will get it right.
No one wants to make a bad decision.
Decision pressure at work is something most of us experience, whether we name it or not.
However, in fast-moving environments, the reality is this:
You will sometimes get it wrong.
Why decision pressure feels so heavy
At work, decisions rarely come with perfect clarity.
Information can be incomplete.
Time is limited.
At the same time, the consequences can affect not just you, but others around you.
So, you move forward anyway.
Because standing still is not an option.
The pressure doesn’t come from deciding. It comes from needing to decide without certainty.
Strength is shown in how you respond, not just what you decide
In my experience, a strong decision-maker is not someone who is always right
You see it in what happens next.
When a poor decision is made:
- Do you acknowledge it?
- Do you learn from it?
- Do you communicate openly with those affected?
People understand pressure.
However, what they respect is honesty.
Trust is built not through perfection, but through how you recover.
A team can grow stronger through difficulty.

When a decision has an impact, something important can happen.
If it is handled well, teams often pull together.
There can be:
- shared effort to resolve the issue
- increased motivation to put things right
- a deeper sense of connection
But this only happens when:
- the decision is owned
- effort is recognised
- space is given to process what happened
Taking time afterwards to reflect - and to allow human reactions to surface - is not a weakness.
It is what allows learning to settle.
Even in the most pressured environments, reflection matters
One of the most pressured environments I’ve observed is in hospital Accident and Emergency departments.
In the TV series The Pitt, doctors and nurses work under constant pressure, with critically ill patients arriving without pause.
Decisions are made rapidly.
Not all are right.
As a result, sometimes, despite best efforts, a patient is lost.
What stood out to me was what happened afterward.
The team would come together to reflect.
They would pause.
Breathe.
Acknowledge what had happened.
No one was expected to carry the burden alone.
You cannot carry every decision forward
No one can hold onto the weight of every decision and still function well.
Because of this, at some point, you have to:
- process what happened
- learn what you can
- and let the rest go
Clarity returns when you stop carrying what no longer serves you.
✨ Practice for the week
The next time you make a decision that doesn’t land well:
Pause before you move on.
Ask yourself:
- What can I learn from this?
- What do I need to communicate?
- What can I now let go?
Keep it simple.
✨ Final reflection
Decision pressure is part of working life.
But it is not something you have to carry alone - or carry forever.
Sometimes the most important step is not the decision itself,
but how you release it and move forward.
If this resonated, you may also find When Over Thinking Takes Over helpful as you develop a steadier way of finding clarity.
Blessings,
Alison Reader: 7659



