First Principles Thinking
Break a problem down to its most fundamental truths and build up from there — rather than copying what others do because "that's how it's done."
Pareto Principle (80/20 Rule)
80% of results come from 20% of causes — identify the high-leverage 20% in your business and ruthlessly deprioritise everything else.
Inversion
Instead of asking how to succeed, ask how to guarantee failure — then avoid those things. Surfaces blind spots that forward-looking analysis always misses.
Second-Order Thinking
Think through not just the immediate consequences of a decision but the downstream consequences of those consequences — ask "and then what?" twice.
Feynman Technique
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it — a four-step method that exposes the gaps in your knowledge by forcing plain-language explanation.
Circle of Competence
Know exactly where your genuine expertise ends — most mistakes come from acting confidently outside your circle without realising you've left it.
Occam's Razor
Among competing explanations, prefer the simplest — complexity needs justification, and most problems are less complicated than anxiety makes them appear.