If you’re reading this, you probably know the feeling well: You have a new notebook or planner, your favourite pen, and a list full of potential milestones. Yet, you’re stuck. You spend hours planning, organising, researching the best system, but when the time comes for you to take action, you lose momentum.
You are what I call a Procrastinator Planner.
Who is a procrastinator planner? Someone who habitually puts off doing things.
This isn't just regular procrastination. It's a special kind of trap where the planning itself becomes the goal, and the aesthetically pleasing to-do list or the process of planning gives you a rush of accomplishment. We get the dopamine hit of "being productive" without ever having to face the messy reality of doing the actual task.
The goal of this post is simple: We need to shift our focus from the satisfaction of planning to the momentum of action.
The "Procrastinator Planner" is someone who enjoys the planning process but puts off the action. For you, this manifests as:
Planning as Avoidance: Getting lost in the details and systems rather than starting the tasks.
Misaligned Goals: Taking on tasks, strategies, or contradictory advice that were or seem successful for others, but don't align with your personal vision, leading to internal resistance and procrastination.
Your Key Insight: The Disconnect
The goal is someone else's blueprint (e.g., following a standard ministry model).
The task doesn't align with your true personal vision or calling.
The Procrastinator Planner is not planning with themselves in mind.
Why do we fall into this loop? It’s complicated, but it usually boils down to two core things.
The Illusion of Progress (The Dopamine Trap)
Planning tricks our brain into feeling productive. When we write down a massive goal—say, "Launch My Ministry"—and then break it down into smaller steps, our brain registers that as progress. We get a quick hit of the feel-good chemical, dopamine, just from creating the list or finalising the system.
This "dopamine hit" from list-making is much easier and faster to achieve than the actual work itself. We trick ourselves into believing that because we spent an hour planning to work, we've essentially done the work.
We feel good. We feel prepared. But that feeling is dangerous because it lets us off the hook for taking the real step forward. Planning becomes a form of "productive avoidance."
Before you write another list, you have to answer this question: Are these goals mine?
You need to step away from the external noise—the people telling you what you should or shouldn't do, the successful blueprints, and the discouraging voices. Find a quiet space and just pause and reflect (selah). What does success authentically look like for you? What is the unique path you feel called to take, even if it looks completely different from everyone else's?
Use the Instinct Test for every single action step you plan: "Can I see me taking action on this?" If the answer is an intuitive yes, write it down. If it feels like a painful obligation that has failed you before, discard it—even if every expert says you should be doing it. Your intuition knows your capacity better than any blueprint.
Action Tip: When you find what works for you, put your time and energy into cultivating it, so when you do fall off track, you have something to disciple you into action.
Once your goals are aligned, you can use these simple systems to enforce action and create momentum:
Use Time Limits to Inspire Action: If you find yourself putting off a task you know you could finish, use time blocks or timers as your motivation. This technique is all about leveraging the time you have right now, which will help you transition from Planning to Doing. For example, if your workday officially ends at 5 PM but you have 30 minutes left, instead of letting that time disappear, ask yourself: "What task can I start or complete right now that fits perfectly into this remaining time?"
This strategy takes the decision-making out of the equation and nudges you to stop procrastinating on things you keep putting off, while prompting you to find something you genuinely want to tackle and move forward on, even if it's a short, focused task that fills that time slot.
Prioritise Momentum Over Perfection: Think about what goal you can make progress in or a task that you can take easy action on today. Remember, a task that is complete is more valuable than a perfect plan that remains in your notebook.
Focus on Small, Attainable Goals: Don't plan a whole phase; plan the Next Smallest Step. Implement the 2-Minute Rule: If a task takes two minutes or less, do it now, don't plan for it or put it on the list. This builds instant momentum.
Create Disciplines: When you lack the motivation to take action, having the right systems in place can eliminate decision fatigue while supporting you in the pursuit of a goal.
Find Your Rhythm: Is there a specific way you like to take action? Are you a first thing in the morning type of person, or is your most productive time after 11 am? When you know how you work, you will notice when it's the right time to focus on a task that will take you 30 minutes versus 3 hours.
Audit Your Workflow: Think about what habits are bringing you a return on investment (ROI), and the systems you have built around planning that are creating resistance. For example, are you overthinking the process? Are there systems to help you go from planning to doing? Have they become a self-discipline that works with the type of person you are? Are these habits yours or someone else's version of what success should look like in your life and ministry? If so, maybe what you're planning isn't how God wants you to show up.
Have A Plan of Execution: If you want to take action, you need to be prepared for the outcome you want to see. This starts with you getting clear on where you want to be in the next 30, 60 or 90 days and creating a rough plan of what that could look like on a biweekly basis and adjusting the steps you need to take as you go.
Optimise Your Action Plan: Is there a step in your planning process that you can streamline to be your most productive self? This can be a small to medium-sized strategy that gives you grace and helps you benefit from what is working right now.
Since the internal motivation to switch from planning to doing is often the missing piece, strategically bring in external incentives:
Reward Systems: Create tangible incentives—a small, desired reward—that you only grant yourself after a specific action item is checked off. This connects action with positive reinforcement, overriding the planning-dopamine hit. It's about giving yourself a genuine reason to cross the finish line.
Recreate Your Systems: Are there frameworks that worked for you in the last season, but no longer work for you now? Have you reflected on what is or isn't working, so you can implement new habits (build discipline in a specific area) and systems to fit your new lifestyle and where your ministry is going?
Accountability Partner: Tell one reliable person what your one main action item is for the day, and ask them to check in on you. Or find someone you can work with, knowing someone else is working alongside you can be incredibly motivating and helpful, especially when the commitment you made to yourself is hard to follow through on solo. This can look like:
A virtual session with a friend or a small group of people who are just as committed as you to working on a task they've been putting off. This could look like you starting one yourself with another person and expanding it to include other like-minded people over time. You could take turns leading the group, so it's not all on one person.
A co-working space (in person) that provides the illusion of co-workers without the pressure of finding a group to work with. See if there are some in your area and test them out until you find one that meets your needs. Or you can take your virtual session and have in-person meet-ups at a library, coffee shop or each other's place.
Hire a virtual assistant (VA): This can be really helpful to delegate tasks that prevent you from taking action within specific areas of your life and ministry. They can also help keep you on track if you find yourself getting distracted. If procrastination is holding you back, you might benefit from meeting with your VA (daily or biweekly) so they can hold you accountable to the task you said you would complete by a certain timeline.
Being a Procrastinator Planner is frustrating, but it means you are a visionary who is exceptionally good at organising. You just need to channel that planning energy into action that aligns with your true, unique path.
Stop seeking the perfect plan; start seeking the next aligned step.
Stop Planning Perfection. Start Creating Momentum.
The Momentum Jumpstart Kit is a list of questions designed to help you go from overplanning to inspired action. It uses Action-First Prompts to help you turn your best intentions into actual results.
What You Get: A document with a list of journaling prompts and reflection questions to help you translate insight into immediate execution. When you're ready, click the link below to get your free journal prompts and finally turn your plans into breakthrough progress.