Decision Fatigue in Founders: How to Regain Clarity
“Decision fatigue is laziness.”
What do you think?
It’s simply not true.
As a startup founder, you make dozens of decisions.
Sometimes, even within the hour.
And it can get exhausting. Maybe you think you’re unmotivated or lethargic.
It’s cognitive depletion. And startup founders are prone to it.
Let’s look at what cognitive depletion is, its causes and how it impacts cognitive performance and emotional regulation.
But first, a story.
founder slumped over computer due to decision fatigue

decision-fatigue
Decision Fatigue: Can You Relate To This?
Rand Fishkin can. Rand Fishkin was the former CEO and founder of Moz and co-founder of SparkToro.
He documented his experiences with decision fatigue in his book, Lost and Founder.
He’s spoken about how, as the CEO of Moz, he had to make calls and choices every hour, at times.
This tapped into the time, energy, and clarity that he sometimes lacked at that moment.
Over time, he reached a point where he was unable to make the clear decisions needed.
This impacted the company’s long-term future.
What happened next?
He defaulted to safe choices.
And avoided big decisions.
Then, he went with the consensus.
This created internal misalignment and hindered the company’s growth.
Rand recognized that he was experiencing emotional burnout partly as a result of this sense of overwhelm.
He stepped down as CEO.
It gave him space to prioritize his health.
So he could then work with Moz in a different role.
How can you recognize cognitive overload?
We’ll get to that.
But first, let’s see what leads to it.
taking a break from cognitive overwhelm to read

decision-fatigue
Causes of decision fatigue
The American Medical Association refers to it as a state of mental overload that can impede your ability to continue making decisions.
In other words, you’re no longer able to make choices, not rational ones, at least.
Decision fatigue sets in when your cognitive resources are depleted after making many choices, mainly in a short timeframe.
The brain’s prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for planning, dips in its performance.
The result?
Impaired executive functioning.
Poor executive function also causes a drop in dopamine.
You know it as the feel-good neurotransmitter that’s released in response to rewarding activities.
A drop in dopamine pushes us to make the easiest choices, not necessarily the best ones.
When stressed, the brain also releases cortisol, the stress hormone.
This means you need to make quick decisions and stay vigilant for other possible threats.
If you’re stressed from making constant decisions, your cortisol levels will stay elevated.
This means your prefrontal cortex makes less rational decisions.
If this cycle continues over time, it will negatively impact your ability to regulate emotions.
It will also impair your ability to form memories, causing overload to worsen.
image of the brain and areas impact by dcision making

decision-fatigue
Decision-Making and Cognitive Overload
Your brain cells get tired when cognitive overload occurs.
You begin to select familiar options.
These may not be the best choices.
You choose instant gratification over deliberation.
And gloss over decisions that require careful planning, ones that are nuanced and need careful consideration.
As a startup founder, there is a high volume of choices you have to make daily.
Perhaps hourly.
With a continuous high volume of decisions involved, each one may seem increasingly difficult.
And when decisions seem more difficult, you’re more likely to:
- Avoid making decisions
- Make impulsive choices
- Take shortcuts
cognitive overload and how it affects ability to make decisions

decision-fatigue
Fatigue and Emotional Dysregulation
Over time, the compounding stress of overwhelm and choices can lead to hormonal imbalances.
With hormonal imbalances come mood changes and physical symptoms.
This can worsen emotional dysregulation in founders.
Poor emotional dysregulation can lead to impaired mental health.
Impaired mental health affects startup founders in various ways.
On a personal level, it leads to anger issues, anxiety, and depression.
Or it can worsen existing symptoms.
It impacts decisions related to the product or the company’s growth.
Overwhelmed founders make reactive and impulsive choices rather than strategic ones.
It contributes to conflict and unnecessary disagreements with co-founders, the team, and customers.
sloga on building about feelings

decision-fatigue
5 Actionable Interventions to Minimize Overload
1. Nervous System Recovery Strategies
Teach your nervous system to soothe at times when you’re not feeling overloaded.
This can be done through taking slow, deep breaths, for a start.
Regular practice at times of calm will help your body learn what safety feels like.
This means it’s easier to access when you’re feeling overloaded.
2. Decision-Making Framework
Use a triage system to prioritize daily and weekly decisions.
Include options for delegating to team members to minimize overwhelm and bottlenecks.
Distinguishing between emotionally heavy decisions and urgent ones can bring clarity on what to do first.
3. Internal Noise Audit
Spot the negative feedback loops in your mind that slow you down.
Write down or voice record 3 mental loops that cripple your decision-making speed and process.
Then, externalize them by adding a phrase like “I notice that…” followed by the relevant loop.
4. Decision-Making During Energy Peaks
Energy levels fluctuate throughout the day.
Do you know what your peaks are?
If you don’t, track these over 3-5 consecutive days.
Spot the trends.
Then, use peak energy windows for decision-heavy tasks.
This is backed by behavioural science research.
When you make energy-heavy decisions during peak times, you reduce the chances of fatigue later on.
5. Automate low-stakes choices
Steve Jobs’ black turtlenecks were an example of this.
Removing the daily decision of what to wear frees up mental energy.
It can be used in other ways to simplify your mental load.
Having a breakfast or meal plan means fewer choices to ponder.
Time blocking on your calendar means similar jobs are completed in one sitting, reducing the need for task switching, which takes up mental load.
decision fatigue represented by overloaded circuits

decision-fatigue
Conclusion
Overwhelm is not the end.
Startup founders are more prone to analysis overload.
Yet, it need not spell doom.
Through awareness and action, you can minimize its impact on the way you view situations.
You can also impact how you make decisions and relate to others.
Next Steps
If you would like support in managing or minimising overload, get in touch.
I offer a 20-minute clarity call where we can connect and explore your requirements. Book here.
FAQs
1. How can startup founders prevent decision fatigue before it starts?
You can reduce the risk by pre-structuring routine decisions. Automate low-stakes tasks, create default options for daily operations, and use time-blocking to batch similar types of decisions. This preserves mental energy for strategic choices that truly matter.
2. What role does sleep and nutrition play in decision fatigue?
Sleep and glucose regulation directly affect the prefrontal cortex, which is the brain’s decision-making hub. Poor sleep or skipped meals lower executive function and increase emotional volatility. Prioritizing rest and balanced nutrition strengthens cognitive stamina and emotional regulation.
3. Why do many founders struggle to delegate even when they know they should?
Many founders equate delegation with loss of control or lowered quality. This perfectionism keeps cognitive load high. Reframing delegation as “shared responsibility” and building trust in your team’s decision-making capacity helps reduce mental burden without loss of standards.
4. How can you tell when decision fatigue is setting in?
Early signs include indecisiveness, second-guessing simple choices, irritability, or impulsive decision-making. Tracking these patterns, especially during late afternoons or after emotionally heavy meetings, can help you recognize depletion before it impairs judgment.
5. What environmental factors make decision fatigue worse in startups?
Constant context-switching, notification overload, and lack of clear decision ownership amplify cognitive drain. Founders who don’t define communication boundaries or decision rights end up micromanaging, burning themselves out, and confusing their teams.
6. How can founders build long-term resilience against cognitive overload?
Think beyond recovery and cultivate cognitive endurance. Practices like reflective journaling, structured rest, consistent exercise, and limiting reactive communication (e.g., Slack or email after hours) strengthen neural pathways tied to focus, patience, and clarity.