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// framework

Hedgehog Concept

Jim Collins, 2001

A clarity framework built on the intersection of three circles — what you're deeply passionate about, what you can be best in the world at, and what drives your economic engine.

// description

The Hedgehog Concept is the intersection of three circles: what you are deeply passionate about, what you can be the best in the world at, and what drives your economic engine (the single metric most closely tied to your profitability). Companies that find and commit to this intersection outperform those that chase multiple directions or pursue activities that satisfy only one or two of the three criteria.

// history

Jim Collins introduced the Hedgehog Concept in his 2001 book Good to Great, which studied companies that made the leap from sustained average performance to sustained exceptional performance. The name references Isaiah Berlin's essay "The Hedgehog and the Fox": the fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing. Collins found that the great companies organised their efforts around a single, clear concept.

// example

A creator evaluates her work through the three circles. Passion: she loves researching niche markets and the detective-work of finding underserved audiences. Best in the world: her combination of KDP knowledge and Midjourney proficiency in a very specific illustration style is genuinely rare. Economic engine: her highest-margin income comes from digital products (templates, guides) not from KDP royalties. Her Hedgehog Concept: creating highly specific niche research and product templates for KDP creators who want to build profitable portfolios without guessing. This clarity allows her to decline projects that are interesting but don't fit the intersection — including a well-paid freelance design gig that would distract from building her template product line.

// katharyne's take

The Hedgehog Concept is the framework I return to whenever I feel tempted to add something new to my business that looks exciting but doesn't quite fit. The discipline of the three circles — passion, world-class potential, and economic engine — is a filter that has saved me from countless interesting distractions. The hardest circle to fill honestly is "what you can be best in the world at," because it requires genuine humility about where your real edges are versus where you're merely competent. Your economic engine tells the truth: what are people actually paying you for, not what do you wish they were paying you for?

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Help me map my Hedgehog Concept for my creator business. Here's what I know about myself: [describe what you love, what you're skilled at, and what's currently driving your income]. For each of the three circles — Passion, Best At, Economic Engine — ask me clarifying questions until we can write a tight one-sentence Hedgehog Concept statement that feels genuinely differentiated, not generic.
I'm considering adding [a new offer / platform / product type] to my business: [describe it]. Apply the Hedgehog Concept to evaluate this opportunity. Does it sit at the intersection of all three circles — something I'm passionate about, something I could be best at in my specific niche, and something that directly serves my economic engine? Or does it only satisfy one or two circles?
Audit my current revenue streams through the Hedgehog Concept lens. Here are my income sources: [list them with approximate % of revenue]. Rank each one against all three circles — passion, best-at potential, and economic engine contribution. Which stream best represents my Hedgehog Concept, and which ones am I maintaining out of inertia rather than strategic fit?
See also: Core Competency · Flywheel Effect · Playing to Win Framework
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