The discipline of finishing
I have 47 unfinished drafts. 12 abandoned side projects. 8 books with bookmarks halfway through.
This is not my problem alone.
Starting is cheap, finishing is expensive#
The cost of starting is "having an idea" + "typing the first word." The cost of finishing is "eliminating every small problem keeping it from shipping" — and those problems are always more numerous than you predicted.
Structural asymmetry. Starting rides on inspiration. Finishing requires discipline.
Nobody cares about your draft#
I used to think my drafts were "almost there." Then I compared the draft I'd been polishing to what eventually shipped — they weren't meaningfully different. The shipped version had one property the draft didn't: it shipped.
A 70-point finished work is worth ten times a 95-point unfinished one. Not exaggeration. The unfinished one's value to the world is zero1.
The three steps for finishing#
What I do now:
- Pick a deadline; tell a friend
- Delete every "I'll come back to this" placeholder paragraph
- Ship, and immediately start the next thing
No "one more polish pass" between (3) and the next thing.
The cost of features argues for default-no on adding things. This argues for default-ship on finishing things. Same spirit.
Footnotes#
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Counter-example: Kafka's unfinished novels reshaped 20th-century literature. But that's the P=0 outlier; you and I are not Kafka. ↩
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