The Deadline Effect

The Deadline Effect

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Summary

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Overall Thoughts

The Deadline Effect is an interesting book, as it’s not one I’d 100% recommend to everyone. But I do have pretty clear thoughts on it. On one hand, I have to commend Christopher Cox for going out and doing truly original reporting for this book. I’ve read a lot of books in the self-development space, and a lot of them basically coast by, quoting Kahneman and Tversky and re-hashing case studies from famous experiments.

Instead of doing that, Cox actually went down into the trenches, talked to people in several industries and saw first-hand how they deal with tight deadlines.

On the other hand, The Deadline Effect is very light on actual synthesis of the techniques being used. I’d say only about 5-10% of this book is dedicated to breaking down the deadline techniques and packaging them into easily-applied prescriptions.

The reason is that Cox seems far more interested in reporting than synthesis. He’s much more eager to tell the stories of the teams he spent time with, and so that’s what the majority of the book entails.

For this reason, I’d only recommend reading the book if you enjoy reading. The reporting itself is well-done and the stories are engaging, but since the focus is on them the vast majority of the time instead of on synthesizing ideas or quoting studies, it’s not like your typical pop-psychology personal development book.

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Main Takeaways
  1. Deadlines can be used to spur action and hone focus, but when used as a blunt instrument they also cause stress and panic, and can cause work to be rushed, sloppy, and full of mistakes.
  2. To use deadlines to their fullest potential, you need to employ some smarter deadline design tactics.
  3. Create checkpoints or interim deadlines en route to the final deadline. These ensure steady progress all all points, instead of a mad dash at the end.
  4. Plan right-to-left - establish the main deadline, then work backwards to plan checkpoints using established data about how long each project phase will take. Stop treating tasks as “novel” - most have been done before and thus offer data on completion time.
  5. Set soft deadlines with “teeth” - i.e. deadlines that have true rewards or consequences, but aren’t as consequential as the “true” deadline. Example: a soft open at a restaurant with friends and family as (paying) guests.
  6. Focus on what matters; push aside everything that’s trivial. (Connection to Cal Newport’s advice to avoid the “Any Benefit” approach)
  7. Hit your deadline with time to spare, then revise, revise, revise. Opportunity for repeated revision is what separates the merely good from the truly great.
  8. Interdependence tends to strengthen a team’s ability to meet a deadline. The more team members rely on each other, the greater the deadline’s pressure effect.
  9. Set specific, difficult goals. People tend to be more successful when goals meet these two criteria. (Ensure that “difficult” requires stretching capabilities, but is still possible within given constraints).
  10. Leverage stochastic deadlines - AKA “deadlines” that could happen at any moment. When you’re aware of a stochastic deadline, you’ll be more likely to ensure you’re ready to meet it at a moment’s notice.