Async Governance GlossaryDefinition

What Is Asynchronous decision making?

Last updated: April 2026

Definition

Asynchronous decision making is the practice of reaching decisions without requiring all participants to be online at the same time. The decision document or proposal circulates in writing, participants comment on their own schedule, and the decision is committed after a defined window or threshold.

Async decision making is distinct from delayed synchronous decision making. The latter is still a meeting — just one that took two weeks to schedule. The former replaces the meeting entirely with a written process.

For distributed teams, async decision making is not optional. Synchronous-only decisions across multiple timezones produce 24-48 hour delays per decision, which compounds across a week into multi-week effective lag.

Why Asynchronous decision making Matters for Distributed Teams

Distributed teams that adopt async decision making make far more decisions per week than teams of equal size that rely on synchronous calls.

The hard part is cultural, not procedural. Teams used to deciding in meetings often resist the slower-feeling but faster-shipping async path.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is asynchronous decision making?

Asynchronous decision making is the practice of reaching decisions without requiring all participants to be online simultaneously. A proposal circulates in writing, participants comment on their own schedule, and the decision is committed after a defined window.

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