2026

Buying Back Time

My take

Buying back your time isn't just about paying someone to do things for you. It's also about what you say no to. Passing on a promotion buys time with family. Skipping that dinner pays for the workout. The clearer you are on how you want your days to look, the easier it gets to decline what doesn't fit.

Managing means designing conditions, not controlling outcomes

My take

Great managers don't manage people — they build environments where good people can do their best work. Control is a management failure mode.

A question is an opinion in disguise

My take

The questions you ask reveal what you believe. How you frame a question predicts which answers you'll accept — and which you've already ruled out.

Complexity is often just clarity that hasn't arrived yet

My take

When something feels complicated, it usually means the right question hasn't been asked yet. Confusion isn't a permanent state — it's a prompt.

Speed is a proxy metric for progress

My take

Moving fast feels like doing more. But most motion isn't progress. Slowness, when intentional, is a sign of clear thinking — not laziness.

The courage to start is different from the courage to continue

My take

Starting requires bravery against uncertainty. Continuing requires bravery against your own doubts once reality has set in and the initial excitement is gone.

AI

AI amplifies your thinking — it doesn't replace it

My take

The output of any AI tool is bounded by the quality of your thinking. Better prompts don't come from prompt tricks — they come from better mental models.

The best ideas don't arrive — they accumulate

My take

Insights are rarely a flash of lightning. They're the slow result of reading, conversations, failed attempts, and enough time for the pieces to find each other.

The goal always changes

My take

When you start writing in public, you want someone to like it. Then you realise you're getting better. Then you realise you're doing it for yourself. It's the same with fitness — you start to look good, you stay to be fit. The goal that gets you started is rarely the goal that keeps you going. That's not a problem. That's the point.

LLMs are only as good as your indifference

My take

If I put the first half of a sentence from one of my pieces into ChatGPT, it completes it — but never predicts what I actually wrote. It makes it generic. Takes away the specific, the strange, the thing only I would say. If you don't care about originality or style, LLMs are good at writing. Otherwise, they're only useful as a thesaurus.

Writing is compression

My take

Writing requires you to keep the insight and remove everything else. Most of us aren't used to making that decision. When I write, almost always, I realise I don't understand what I thought I understood. Something new comes out. The compression is where the value is.

2025

I've always been more afraid of being boring than being wrong

My take

Being wrong is fixable. You update, you move on. Boring is a slower problem. You can be precise and thorough and correct and still produce nothing that anyone feels. I've made some strange career choices because of this. I'm not sure I regret any of them.

Clarity is a form of kindness

My take

Vague feedback protects the giver, not the receiver. So does vague strategy, vague direction, vague relationships. Most of the unclear things in organisations exist because someone is uncomfortable with the conversation that clarity would require. Saying the thing plainly is often the more generous act.