I interviewed Peter Diamandis, the founder of XPRIZE who's worked with (and studied) the likes of Elon Musk, Larry Page, Ray Kurzweil and Jeff Bezos.
Here are 5 mindset frameworks he believes any entrepreneur can learn from.
THREAD 🧵
0/ For Peter, mindset is an entrepreneur's most important asset:
"I posit that if you took away all of their money and all their technology, but you kept their mindset, they would regain a tremendous amount of success."
1/ FIRST-PRINCIPLES THINKING (Musk)
A mode of inquiry borrowed from physics, where you drill down to the fundamental truths of a problem and then draw conclusions.
2/ LONG-TERM THINKING (Bezos)
This is cliche at first glance but actually makes a lot of sense for Amazon. Since the organization experiments so much, it fails ALOT. Having a long-term mindset is the only way to stomach all the inevitable Ls.
3/ MOONSHOT MINDSET (Page)
Former Google CEO Larry Page dubs this framework "10x thinking" (creating products and services 10x better than existing options). Here's the rationale:
4/ EXPONENTIAL THINKING (Kurzweil)
The brain thinks in linear terms. It's important to grasp exponential growth.
Just started Max Chafkin's new Peter Thiel book ("The Contrarian"). In anticipation of it, also re-read Thiel's 2014 Reddit AMA...tons of interesting answers.
THREAD: Here are 10 of them including on Elon, MBAs, Facebook, Bitcoin and Palantir.
1/ Thiel's first impression of Elon
2/ Thiel's biggest investing mistake was not doubling down on Facebook (he also sold 80% of stake shortly after FB's IPO, at about $20 a share...it's now >$350)
Interesting theory: "The Economist magazine cover" as the ultimate sign of consensus, so contrarian investors bet against it.
Old covers include:
◻️ "Brazil's Fall" = bottom of Brazil stocks
◻️ "The Almighty Dollar" = top of USD
◻️ "The end of oil" = bottom(ish) of oil
Obviously, there's cherry-picking here.
For example, this Big Tech cover in January 2018 did *not* call the top of Big Tech (not even close).
Anyways, the cover of The Economist this week was on DeFi. Not saying it's anywhere near the top, pls don't @ me (was just the latest cover and wanted to talk about the theory).
Found a glorious TikTok account: "Design Secrets", which explains the technical and psychological design rationale behind everyday things.
Here are 14 gems 🧵
1/ MOVIE THEATRE SEATS & CURTAINS are red because it is the first color the human eye loses sight of when lights dim (or in darkness).
With this effect, people focus on the show instead of surroundings.
2/ DRAIN PIPES are U-shaped to create a one-way valve that lets water flow but also traps dangerous gases.
◻️ Water flows down
◻️ The U-shape collects some water, creating a "seal"
◻️ Gases from the plumbing can NOT pass up to the sink because of the "water trap"