“I need this ASAP.”
“It’ll only take five minutes.”
“Can you squeeze this in before I send an email later today?”
“You don’t still work nights, do you?”
If you’ve ever said any of these phrases to a service provider, let me translate what they usually mean on the other end:
Please rearrange your entire day because I didn’t plan mine.
What ASAP Actually Does to a Schedule
I work with a schedule. A real one.
Every Sunday, I sit down and plan my week — reviewing emails, messages, forms, and requests so nothing slips through the cracks. I block time carefully. Projects stack on top of one another. Some tasks take hours, some take days, and some require uninterrupted focus.
By the time Monday starts, my week is already full.
So when an “ASAP” request shows up midweek, it doesn’t slide neatly into an empty slot — because there isn’t one. It collides with work already promised to other clients. It pushes deadlines. It forces longer days. It spills into evenings and weekends.
And by Wednesday, I’m behind — not because I planned poorly, but because someone else didn’t plan at all.
That’s why ASAP, in my world, stands for:
Automatic Schedule Assassination Problem.
“It’ll Only Take Five Minutes” Is a Myth
There is no such thing as “just five minutes.”
Five minutes requires:
- context switching
- opening files
- verifying details
- making sure nothing breaks
- testing
- and often, cleanup afterward
Now multiply that “five minutes” by ten clients over a week.
Those minutes don’t disappear. They compound — and they come straight out of nights, weekends, family time, and recovery.
Why Care Plans Exist (and Why They Matter)
I offer care and maintenance plans for a reason.
They reserve time in my schedule before it’s needed — for updates, quick changes, last-minute requests, and inevitable surprises. Clients on these plans become priority clients because they’ve planned ahead.
Most clients, however, choose not to be on a care plan.
That’s fine.
What isn’t fine is expecting care-plan-level responsiveness without care-plan-level commitment.
Urgent, unplanned work is not included by default. It never was — even if, in the past, I made it feel like it was.
What Happens When I Say Yes Anyway
When I squeeze in unplanned work:
- another client waits longer
- a promised deadline shifts
- my schedule collapses
- stress increases
- and something — personal or professional — gets neglected
I didn’t leave agency life to recreate 70-hour weeks fueled by someone else’s poor planning. And yet, that’s exactly what happens when boundaries stay blurry.
This isn’t about being unwilling to help.
It’s about being unwilling to burn down the entire week to do it.
The Real Problem (Spoiler: It’s Not the Client)
Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
This only keeps happening because I allow it.
I’m a problem-solver. A helper. A “let me just fix it real quick” person. And when you don’t charge appropriately for urgency, you train people to expect it.
Not because they’re malicious — but because humans adapt to what’s available.
And if last-minute work always gets done with no friction, no cost, and no delay… why would anyone change?
Boundaries Aren’t Punishment — They’re Sustainability
Emergency work isn’t wrong.
Urgency isn’t immoral.
But urgency does cost more — in time, disruption, and energy.
Every other trade understands this:
- plumbers
- electricians
- mechanics
- medical professionals
Late-night, weekend, and rush work comes with a premium. Not as punishment — but as respect for the cost it carries.
My work is no different.
Why I’m Saying This Out Loud
Because this is business.
If you’re a business owner, you will face the same pressure — clients asking for exceptions, urgency, discounts, and favors. If you don’t define your processes, pricing, and availability clearly, resentment builds. Burnout follows.
Boundaries aren’t selfish.
They’re how good work continues to exist.
Going Forward
Flexibility still exists.
Help still exists.
Care still exists.
But:
- last-minute work is billed accordingly
- priority goes to planned commitments
- and “ASAP” no longer hijacks an entire week
That change may cost me a client or two. And that’s okay.
Because a business that survives by sacrificing its owner isn’t sustainable — it’s just slow burnout with invoices attached.