Concepts
A list of ideas, principles and mental models that I’ve found useful or interesting.
Asymmetric upside | Nassim Nicholas Taleb | Mental models | |
| Situations where potential gains far exceed potential losses, creating favorable risk-reward profiles | |||
Circle of competence | Warren Buffett | Mental models | |
| Operating within your areas of genuine expertise and understanding your limitations | |||
First principles thinking | Aristotle | Mental models | |
| Breaking down complex problems into fundamental truths and reasoning up from there | |||
Inversion | Charlie Munger | Mental models | |
| Thinking backwards from failure to find success by considering what could go wrong | |||
Occam's razor | William of Ockham | Mental models | |
| The simplest explanation is usually the correct one | |||
One way doors vs Two way doors | Jeff Bezos | Mental models | |
| Distinguishing between reversible and irreversible decisions to optimize decision-making speed | |||
Opportunity cost | Abraham Wald | Mental models | |
| The value of the best alternative foregone when making a choice | |||
Second-order thinking | Mental models | ||
| Considering the consequences of consequences, not just immediate effects | |||
Steel manning | Mental models | ||
| Arguing against the strongest version of opposing views rather than weak strawman versions | |||
Systems thinking | Jay Forrester | Mental models | |
| Understanding how interconnected parts work together as a whole system | |||
The map is not the territory | Alfred Korzybski | Mental models | |
| The representation of something is not the thing itself - models are simplifications of reality | |||
20-punch card rule | Warren Buffett | Mental models
Investing | |
| If you only had 20 investment decisions for your lifetime, you would focus intensely on quality over quantity | |||
Incentives superpower | Charlie Munger | Mental models | |
| Understanding that incentives drive behavior more than anything else, and designing systems accordingly | |||
Mr. Market | Benjamin Graham | Mental models
Investing | |
| Viewing market prices as quotes from an emotional, irrational partner rather than accurate valuations of business worth | |||
Pareto (80/20) principle | Vilfredo Pareto | Mental models | |
| 80% of effects come from 20% of causes - the vital few versus the trivial many | |||
Tragedy of the commons | Garrett Hardin | Mental models | |
| Individual rational behavior leads to collective irrationality when shared resources are overused by self-interested actors | |||
Anchoring | Amos Tversky
Daniel Kahneman | Cognitive biases | |
| Initial information heavily influences subsequent judgments and decisions | |||
Base rate neglect | Daniel Kahneman | Cognitive biases | |
| Ignoring statistical base rates when making decisions, leading to poor probability judgments | |||
Choice architecture | Richard Thaler
Cass Sunstein | Cognitive biases | |
| The design of contexts in which people make decisions significantly influences those decisions | |||
Confirmation bias | Peter Wason | Cognitive biases | |
| The tendency to search for, interpret, and recall information that confirms pre-existing beliefs | |||
Conjunction fallacy | Amos Tversky
Daniel Kahneman | Cognitive biases | |
| Incorrectly believing that specific conditions are more probable than general ones | |||
Curse of knowledge | Chip Heath and Dan Heath | Cognitive biases | |
| Difficulty remembering what it's like not to know something, leading to poor communication | |||
Endowment effect | Richard Thaler | Cognitive biases | |
| People value things more highly simply because they own them | |||
Framing effects | Daniel Kahneman
Amos Tversky | Cognitive biases | |
| The way information is presented significantly influences decisions and judgments | |||
Frequency illusion | Arnold Zwicky | Cognitive biases | |
| The tendency to notice something more frequently after becoming aware of it, creating the illusion that it has increased in frequency | |||
IKEA effect | Michael Norton
Daniel Mochon
Dan Ariely | Cognitive biases | |
| People value things more highly when they've put effort into creating or building them | |||
Loss aversion | Daniel Kahneman | Cognitive biases | |
| Losses feel roughly twice as painful as equivalent gains feel good | |||
Mere exposure effect | Robert Zajonc | Cognitive biases | |
| The tendency to develop preferences for things we're familiar with through repeated exposure | |||
Paradox of choice | Barry Schwartz | Cognitive biases | |
| Having too many options can lead to anxiety, decision paralysis, and regret | |||
Reciprocity | Robert Cialdini | Cognitive biases | |
| People feel obligated to return favors and repay debts, even unsolicited ones | |||
Sunk cost fallacy | Richard Thaler | Cognitive biases | |
| Continuing poor investments due to past investment rather than future value | |||
Survivorship bias | Abraham Wald | Cognitive biases | |
| The logical error of concentrating on success stories while overlooking failures | |||
Bystander effect | John Darley and Bibb Latané | Cognitive biases | |
| The tendency for people to be less likely to help someone in need when other people are present, due to diffusion of responsibility | |||
Minto pyramid (SCQA) | Barbara Minto | Communication | |
| A structured way to present ideas starting with the conclusion, then supporting arguments | |||
Perceived value is value | Rory Sutherland | Communication | |
| What customers perceive as valuable is what drives purchasing decisions, regardless of objective measures | |||
Show, don't tell | Anton Chekhov | Communication | |
| Demonstrate through actions and examples rather than explaining with words | |||
100 minus your age | Heuristic | ||
| A rule for determining how many pages to read before giving up on a book | |||
Two-pizza rule | Jeff Bezos | Heuristic | |
| Teams should be small enough that two pizzas can feed the entire team | |||
A players hire A players, B players hire C players | Steve Jobs | Leadership | |
| High performers hire other high performers, while mediocre performers hire people worse than themselves | |||
Barrels & Ammunition Framework | Keith Rabois | Leadership | |
| The constraint in scaling organizations is finding people who can execute ideas, not generating ideas themselves | |||
Disagree and commit | Andy Grove | Leadership | |
| Teams should debate decisions thoroughly but commit fully once decided, ensuring both quality discussion and unified execution | |||
DRI | Apple | Leadership | |
| Directly Responsible Individual - one person accountable for specific outcomes | |||
Growth mindset | Carol Dweck | Personal development | |
| The belief that abilities and intelligence can be developed through effort and learning | |||
You become the average of the people you spend the most time with | Jim Rohn | Personal development | |
| Your character, habits, and success are heavily influenced by your closest relationships | |||
Don't talk to the Police | James Duane | Principles | |
| Legal advice about exercising your right to remain silent during police interactions | |||
Funnel friction paradox | Principles | ||
| Adding friction to a process can sometimes improve conversion rates by qualifying users and increasing perceived value | |||
Less is more | Ludwig Mies van der Rohe | Principles | |
| The principle that simplicity and clarity are better than complexity and clutter | |||
Marginal gains | Dave Brailsford | Principles | |
| Small, incremental improvements that compound to create significant results over time | |||
Order off the secret menu | Principles | ||
| Look for hidden opportunities and options that aren't immediately visible | |||
Parkinson's Law | C. Northcote Parkinson | Principles | |
| Parkinson's Law states that work expands to fill the time available for its completion. | |||
Skin in the game | Nassim Nicholas Taleb | Principles | |
| Having personal stake in the outcomes of your decisions or advice | |||
Compound interest is the 8th wonder of the world | Warren Buffett
Terry Smith | Principles | |
| The result of reinvesting earnings, so that earnings generate their own earnings over time | |||
Peeking problem (A/B Testing) | Principles | ||
| Repeatedly checking A/B test results and stopping when significance is found inflates false positive rates due to multiple comparisons | |||
Barbell strategy | Nassim Nicholas Taleb | Investing | |
| Combining extremely safe and extremely risky investments while avoiding the middle | |||