Executive manager and philanthropist Sam Kazran is drawing attention to what he describes as a pervasive but frequently ignored problem in professional environments: the erosion of clarity through excessive complexity and hesitation. According to Kazran, many individuals and teams mistake constant activity for genuine progress, resulting in stalled initiatives, burnout, and indecision. "I've watched capable people get stuck not because they lack skill, but because everything around them feels louder than it needs to be," Kazran said. "When there's too much noise, people stop moving." He emphasizes that this issue is not rooted in laziness but in systems that have become too convoluted to support effective decision-making.
Research supports the prevalence of this challenge. A Harvard Business Review study indicates 67% of initiatives fail due to unclear priorities and slow decision-making. McKinsey research finds workers spend up to 60% of their time trying to understand unclear tasks or expectations. Additional data shows decision fatigue can reduce accuracy by up to 50% after repeated choices, while teams with unclear ownership are three times more likely to miss deadlines according to the Project Management Institute. Over 70% of employees report that meetings often hinder rather than help work.
Kazran argues that clarity is not about reducing workload but about focusing on the right work. He recalls an instance from his career where simplifying an overly complex project process led the team to finish early with significantly reduced stress. "Clear goals, simple language, and defined ownership allow people to act with confidence instead of waiting for permission," he noted. "When people know what matters, they don't freeze. They move."
For individuals seeking to address this in their own work, Kazran recommends starting with small, actionable steps. These include writing one's main goal in a single sentence, limiting decisions to three options when possible, eliminating one unnecessary meeting or task weekly, asking one clear question instead of sending lengthy messages, and taking five quiet minutes before making pressured decisions. "You don't need permission to simplify your own system," he stated. "Clarity starts with one decision."
Kazran frames the restoration of clarity as a shared responsibility that extends beyond formal leadership roles. "You don't need a title to reduce noise," he asserted. "You just need the courage to ask what actually matters and act on it." He encourages professionals at all levels to pause, simplify, and consciously choose clarity over chaos, suggesting that consistent small changes can prevent months of frustration caused by overcomplication and decision paralysis.


