Why task masking keeps growing in modern workplaces

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

You know the scene. Calendars are packed, Slack lights up, the standup runs long, and there is a new Notion board with clean tags and tidy dates. Yet the one thing that would unlock revenue still sits untouched. No one is slacking. People are tired. They are also performing.

Call it task masking. It is the habit of doing work that reads as responsible while avoiding the move that carries risk, confrontation, or finality. I see it in Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, and Riyadh. It shows up in different accents, but the rhythm is the same. The team signals momentum. The business does not move.

Last year I worked with a seed stage fintech in KL. Twelve people, nine months of runway, two pilots that could convert if billing went live. After a tough board call, the founder pushed the team into an always on mode. Daily check ins. Twice a week investor updates. Design reviews that pulled in three extra people for alignment. It felt like leadership. It also rewarded visibility over value.

The intention made sense. They wanted to prove discipline to investors and keep morale from sinking. They believed that more surface area would prevent surprises. What happened instead was a reshuffle of effort toward safer tasks. Product managers cleaned up backlogs. Designers refreshed the design system and renamed components. Sales booked more discovery calls with small logos that would never pass compliance. Engineers refactored, then refactored the refactor. The only module that mattered was the invoicing API needed for the first paying customer. It kept slipping.

The founder became the status router. If you sent an update at midnight, he replied at one. The team learned that speed to response meant care. Real ownership got blurry. A PM typed, I will chase this. A designer said, I can help. Three helpers later, no owner. Hybrid hours between Singapore and KL added small delays that felt polite. Slack became a stage where effort was applauded and escalation felt rude.

By week six the dashboard told a calm but brutal story. Monthly recurring revenue was flat. Cycle time per story grew by two days. Uptime looked excellent, which is easy when nothing risky ships. Top of funnel leads rose forty percent after a content push, but sales qualified leads did not budge. In the pipeline review, a Saudi advisor asked, Who owns the buyer’s pain on our best account. Silence. The founder finally said, I do. The advisor looked at him and said, You are the bottleneck.

That line cut through the theatre. They canceled two ceremonies that day and held one hard conversation. The founder admitted he was shielding the team from the scary calls. The sales lead admitted he was booking meetings that felt productive because rejection felt worse. The engineering lead said she was refactoring to avoid the brittle interface no one could agree on. There was no villain. There was only the fear that the next decisive move might expose a real limit.

Here is what changed within a fortnight, and why it mattered. The team picked a single non negotiable for the week. The invoicing API had to ship to one pilot behind a feature flag. That decision forced clarity. The PM wrote down what done meant in customer terms, not effort terms. The engineering lead blocked two mornings for depth work and declined every meeting without guilt. The founder wrote the pricing note himself and sent it to the pilot sponsor, then stepped back. Friday came with a short Loom demo to the customer. The pilot signed the next Tuesday.

There is a simple pattern underneath this. Work that creates social safety is seductive. It is clean, visible, and low conflict. Work that reduces business risk is messy. It invites pushback and commits you to a result you cannot spin. When pressure rises, humans seek safety. Early teams need rituals that reward risk reduction instead.

I teach a small rule that sounds soft but lands hard. Choose one scary deliverable every week. The word scary matters. It should be the move that could trigger a yes or a no. A new price on paper. A demo customers can critique. A contract template you will actually send. If you feel your stomach drop, you are close. If it can sit in a deck without consequence, you are still masking.

Ownership must be singular. Helpers can assist. One person must own the outcome and the follow through. Early teams in Malaysia and Singapore are often polite. We are trained to share responsibility. It is kind. It also hides the gap between contribution and accountability. When a task has one owner, the conversation shifts from who worked hard to whether the outcome happened. That is culture you can scale.

Progress needs public proof. At this startup we ended every week with one artifact a customer could touch. Release notes that named the improvement in plain language. A ninety second screen recording with an ugly cursor that still showed the flow working. A signed letter of intent with a counterparty who could veto it. This ritual made it easier to say no to tasks that only made the team look tidy.

Depth hours are not a luxury. They are the only way to move work that matters. We protected twelve to sixteen hours per builder each week that could not be touched. No meetings. No quick sync. No admin. Leaders modeled it by going quiet themselves. Status updates moved to asynchronous checklists that took five minutes, not thirty. If someone missed a Slack ping, no one panicked. If it was urgent, the owner called.

Draw a red line for optics. If a task improves your image without improving your sell or ship, park it. Investors do not need twice weekly updates filled with velocity theatre. They need one clear note each month that shows what changed for customers, how cash looks, and what risk you retired. It is better to be quiet and deliver than loud and drifting.

Standups need a different question. Not what did you do. Ask what did you move that a customer can feel. The language matters because it forces people to connect their activity to a human on the other side. A button moved is not progress. A confused user who can now pay is.

There is also regional nuance that leaders should respect. In Saudi teams, relationships carry weight and public disagreement can feel like disrespect. In Singapore and Malaysia, deference can make people sit on questions they should escalate. Both contexts can feed task masking if leaders do not model what healthy escalation looks like. You can be respectful and still be clear. You can preserve harmony and still commit to a decision that ends debate. Performance cultures that confuse visibility with value will burn energy and morale at the same time.

The most honest moment on that KL team did not happen in a meeting. It happened in a hallway when the founder told the sales lead, I kept asking you for more meetings because it made me feel safe. The lead replied, I kept booking them because it let me feel useful. Neither of us picked the call we were both avoiding. Then they went back to the room and made the call.

If you are reading this with a tab full of dashboards open, ask one question. What is the one move you are avoiding that would either unlock money or expose a truth. If you name it out loud, your team will likely breathe out. People are exhausted by performative busyness. They want to do the work that matters. They need permission to stop pretending.

Here is what I would do differently on day one if I were starting again. I would define progress in customer terms and write it down where the whole team can see it. I would schedule depth hours on the calendar before the first all hands. I would make investor updates a monthly habit tied to customer evidence, not a weekly performance loop. I would teach my team that polite silence costs more than honest friction. And I would say the quiet thing early. Task masking is not laziness. It is fear, dressed up as responsibility. The fix is not a harsher tone. It is clearer ownership, braver sequencing, and proof that you will back your people when they choose the work that counts.


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