The 51% Rule (and 3 More Strategies to Think Like a Millionaire) with Steven Bartlett
Four decision-making frameworks from Steven Bartlett that cut through overthinking, self-doubt, and social conditioning.
Overview
Steven Bartlett, founder and host of The Diary of a CEO, joins Mel Robbins to discuss how he built businesses and made life decisions by systematically questioning received wisdom. The conversation covers his childhood in poverty, the entrepreneurial instincts that emerged from it, and four concrete frameworks he uses to make faster, higher-quality decisions in business and life.
Key takeaways
Jeff Bezos's Type 1 vs. Type 2 decision framework: slow down on irreversible doors, accelerate everything else.
The 51% Rule: on big decisions, aim for 51% certainty and commit, because 100% certainty only exists in hindsight.
Speed of decision-making is a competitive advantage; the real cost is the months or years spent not deciding.
First-principles thinking means stripping away social convention and reasoning up from what you actually know and want.
Daily introspection — summarizing one experience into a short post each evening — reliably builds self-awareness over time.
Worth quoting
"The biggest cost in life isn't a failed experiment being wrong about a decision, it is the nine months, the ten years, the fifteen years you waste deciding whether to make the decision."
"The biggest risk is staying in banking — the biggest risk is not what people might say when you leave banking."
"Failure is feedback, feedback is knowledge, and knowledge is power — so failure is the power you're looking for."
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