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Close Karissa Kane: Cutting It

But according to productivity strategist , living in the "cutting it close" zone isn't a personality quirk—it’s a risk management failure. In her work on high-stakes execution, Kane argues that while urgency feels productive, the chronic last-minute scramble actually steals your ability to think strategically.

Here is how to recognize the trap of "cutting it close" and build a buffer without killing your motivation. Karissa Kane points out a hard truth: Pressure doesn’t create quality; it just creates completion. cutting it close karissa kane

When you cut it close, you aren't accessing hidden genius. You are simply lowering your standards for "done." You stop editing, refining, or considering alternatives. You just ship . But according to productivity strategist , living in

Build the buffer. Lower the stakes. Finish early just once—and notice how good it feels to simply be done . Want more strategies on escaping the urgency trap? Follow Karissa Kane’s work on strategic productivity and high-stakes execution. Karissa Kane points out a hard truth: Pressure

Separate the start from the finish . You can still use a artificial deadline to generate speed—but apply it to the first draft , not the final delivery. Give yourself 45 minutes to vomit out a rough draft (cutting it close on purpose), then give yourself a real buffer to refine it. The Buffer is Not Slack (The 20% Rule) One of Kane’s most useful frameworks is the "Buffer Theory." High-performers don't actually enjoy cutting it close; they just fail to account for reality.