A framework is a way of thinking about a problem that provides clarity and improves decision making. The most powerful frameworks I’ve found: (View Tweet)
The Feynman Technique To learn anything: Step 1: Identify a topic Step 2: Try to explain it to a 5-year-old Step 3: Study to fill in knowledge gaps Step 4: Organize, convey, and review True genius is the ability to simplify, not complicate. Simple is beautiful. (View Tweet)
The Regret Minimization Framework The goal is to minimize the number of regrets in life. When faced with a difficult decision: (1) Project into the future. (2) Look back on the decision. (3) Ask "Will I regret not doing this?" (4) Act accordingly. Simple, effective. (View Tweet)
The Eisenhower Decision Matrix Learn the difference between urgent and important. Place tasks on a 2x2 matrix: • Important & Urgent • Important & Not Urgent • Not Important & Urgent • Not Important & Not Urgent Prioritize, delegate, or delete accordingly.
The 5 Types of Wealth Money is NOT the only type of wealth. There are 5 types: • Financial (money) • Social (relationships) • Physical (health) • Mental (health, knowledge, faith) • Time (freedom) The pursuit of financial wealth can rob you of the others. Don't let it. (View Tweet)
Green Lines vs. Black Lines Consider this image from @waitbutwhy: • Black Lines = Paths Closed • Green Lines = Paths Open Stop focusing on the black lines behind you. Start focusing on all of the green lines before you. It is a future with immense opportunity.
Parkinson’s Law Work expands to fill the time available for its completion. When you establish fixed hours, you find unproductive ways to fill it. Work more, get less done. If your goal is to do inspired, creative work, work like a lion instead: Sprint. Eat. Rest. Repeat. (View Tweet)
Local vs. Tourist When faced with chaos, ask yourself whether you're a local or a tourist. Tourists flee bad weather. Locals are aware the seasons change. Play games where you're a local. Never be a "Stubborn Local”—ignoring evidence that something has fundamentally changed. (View Tweet)
Compounding Consider this image from @JamesClear: Compounding is one of the most beautiful things in the world. But it can work for or against you. Extraordinary achievements are often just the result of a large volume of tiny actions. Small things become big things.
Second-Order Thinking Imagine a rock is thrown into a lake. The splash is the first-order effect—the ripples are the second-order effects. The world is filled with first-order thinkers. Dig deeper—ask "and then what?” Second-order thinkers will always be in short supply. (View Tweet)
The Paradox of Effort You have to put in more effort to make something appear effortless. Effortless, elegant performances are simply the result of a large volume of consistent, effortful practice. Small things become big things. Simple is not simple. (View Tweet)
BS Asymmetry Principle The energy required to refute bullshit is much larger than the energy required to produce it. This is why BS spreads so easily—especially on social media. It's also why we need to make a deliberate effort to fight back against it. (View Tweet)
Intellectual Sparring Partners Most of us need fewer friends and more intellectual sparring partners. Friends are easy to come by. Intellectual sparring partners are harder to find. They will call you on your BS, question your assumptions, and push you to think deeply. (View Tweet)
The Big 3 Razors Occam's Razor: The simplest explanation is often the best one. Hanlon's Razor: Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity. Hitchens' Razor: Anything asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. (View Tweet)
Luck Surface Area Much of what we call "luck" is the macro result of 1,000s of micro actions. Your habits put you in a position where luck is more likely to strike. If you want to create more luck, increase your luck surface area. Open up the aperture to let more luck in. (View Tweet)
Uphill Decisions When faced with two options, choose the one that’s more difficult in the short-term. @naval calls this making "uphill decisions”. It requires a forced override of your pain avoidance instinct. It's worth it—short-term pain creates compounding long-term gain. (View Tweet)
The Cobra Effect The British offered bounties for cobra heads—so locals bred cobras to turn in their heads. A policy designed to reduce the cobra population had the opposite effect. Lesson: When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure. (View Tweet)
The 1-in-60 Rule Tiny deviations are amplified by distance and time. A 1 degree error in heading will cause a plane to miss its target by 1 mile for every 60 miles flown. Lesson: Small miss now = large miss later. Always make real-time course corrections and adjustments. (View Tweet)
The Weekend Test "What the smartest people do on the weekend is what everyone else will do during the week in ten years." - @cdixon Observe the weekend projects of the smartest people in your circles. Odds are those will become a key part of our future. Invest accordingly. (View Tweet)
Play to Learn Old Way: Learn to Play. New Way: Play to Learn. We are living in an unprecedented era—historical boundaries are being broken, enabling anyone to participate. If you're trying to learn anything new, insert yourself into the game. It's the only way. (View Tweet)
Skin in the Game Skin in the Game means that the key principals participate in both the upside and downside associated with any decisions. Always look for its presence in any new situation. Avoid games where those making the rules don't have any skin in the game. (View Tweet)
30-for-30 Plan Jerry Seinfeld hangs a calendar on the wall and uses a red marker to put an X over every day that he completes his daily writing. It's not about quality, it's about consistency. If you want to improve at anything: • 30 days • 30 min per day Build the habit. (View Tweet)
Question-Action Matrix Asking great questions uncovers the truth—bias for action builds upon it. The four quadrants: Q1: World-changers (rare!) Q2: Grinders/hustlers Q3: Philosophers/thinkers Q4: Dead zone Invest behind Q1s, hire more Q2s, spend time with Q3s, and avoid Q4s.
Zone of Genius Your Zone of Genius is where your interests, passions and skills align. Operating in your Zone of Genius means playing games you are uniquely well-suited to win. Once you identify it, you can stop playing their games and start playing yours.
Those are 20+ frameworks to provide clarity and help solve complex problems. Follow me @SahilBloom for more writing on frameworks and decision-making. I share one framework in my newsletter every Friday. Join 115,000+ others who receive it! https://t.co/32basvpFtR (View Tweet)