The most profitable spot in a grocery store isn’t a shelf. It’s the endcap, that little display at the mouth of the aisle where a product you weren’t looking for sits at exactly the height of your reaching hand. Brands pay for that spot. Not because what’s on it is better. Because it’s closer. Closeness, it turns out, is for sale.
You already know this if you’ve bought a charger at an airport, a candy bar at the register, or a breakfast sandwich under a heat lamp at a Kwik Trip when you only stopped for gas. You didn’t choose those things. Proximity chose them, and you signed the receipt.
Seth Godin wrote a tiny piece a while back about the next click. Of everything you could do next, is the thing sitting right beside the last thing you did really the best one? He called the answer obvious and the habit common anyway. He was right, and it has gotten worse, because the endcap moved. It used to live in stores.
Now it lives in your screen.
Every open tab is an endcap. Every notification is a product set at eye level. And the new wrinkle, the one that actually changes the arithmetic, is that you can now start work faster than you can choose it. Point a machine at a task and it runs. Point it at ten and all ten run. The bottleneck stopped being how much you can do.
It became which thing deserves doing, and that question never arrives with a badge or a buzz.
That leaves us drifting toward the adjacent. The session you had open last. The fire someone just lit in a thread. The task that’s easiest to begin because it’s already half-loaded in your head. None of it chosen. All of it reached for.
Reaching for the nearest thing carries a cost that compounds when your tools are fast. A slow person who picks the wrong task loses an afternoon. A tireless machine aimed at the wrong task builds you a polished, fully automated version of the wrong thing and hands it to you before lunch.
Speed doesn’t correct bad aim. It enlarges it.
The cruel part is which tasks tend to sit on the endcap. It’s almost always the loud, customer-facing, someone-is-waiting work. The fire. The reply. The thing with a name attached and an emotion behind it. The work that actually carries a company forward is usually quieter and further back. The process that’s grinding your team down a little more each week. The internal tool nobody outside the building is demanding because nobody outside the building can see it. That work never pings you. It has no endcap. It waits on the bottom shelf, at the back of the aisle, behind the thing that’s screaming.
(A real test… adjust your Claude cowork or code settings to organize by “recent” if that’s still not the default. Go ahead and scan the top end of the list and then scroll down to the bottom end of the list. Which set is getting done because of adjacency? Which set actually has potential for the greatest impact? Yea. You probably don’t even need to do this because you know.)
Automate only what’s adjacent and you’ll automate every fire and never the thing that keeps starting them.
The next click was always a small decision. You just used to make a few hundred of them a day, by hand.
Now you make them on behalf of something that never tires, never gets bored, and will never once stop to wonder whether the thing in front of it was the thing that mattered.
That part is still on you. Keep it there.
Stay Positive & Archive All Your Projects And See Which You Actually Search For Again
