If you're unsure which path to take, choose one that generates energy and motion, even if the direction seems imperfect. It is far easier to course-correct a moving ship than to start a stationary one. Action creates clarity and momentum that analysis alone cannot provide.
When facing ambiguity, the best strategy is not to wait for perfect information but to engage in "sense-making." This involves taking small, strategic actions, gathering data from them, and progressively building an understanding of the situation, rather than being paralyzed by analysis.
Leaders often feel pressured to act, creating 'motion' simply to feel productive. True 'momentum,' however, is built by first stepping back to identify the *right* first step. This ensures energy is directed towards focused progress on core challenges, not just scattered activity.
When you take a professional risk, the result is binary: either you succeed, or you fail. While failure might sting, it provides a definitive answer, freeing you from the mental anguish of wondering 'what if.' Both outcomes are superior to the paralysis and prolonged uncertainty of inaction.
To start something new, you don't need the full roadmap. You only need to know three things: A (an honest assessment of your current situation), Z (your ultimate destination), and B (your very next step). Forget C through Y; focus on B and gain clarity through action.
The goal is not a single, perfect action but consistent movement, however messy. Showing up before you feel ready creates momentum. This momentum is a force that makes things happen, creating a cascade of small wins and placing you in the path of unexpected opportunities. The universe responds to movement, not perfection.
A rational optimist's mindset views problems as opportunities for growth and discovery, not setbacks. Life is movement and stasis is death. Engaging with problems, even when it causes disruption, is necessary to create progress and unlock new, better challenges to solve.
Action, even incorrect action, produces valuable information that clarifies the correct path forward. This bias toward doing over planning is a key trait of outliers. Waiting for perfect information is a silent killer of ambition, while immediate action creates momentum and reveals opportunities.
Big goals are inspiring at first but quickly become overwhelming, leading to inaction. The secret is to ignore the large goal and focus exclusively on executing small, daily or weekly "micro-actions." This builds momentum, which is a more reliable and sustainable driver of progress than fleeting motivation.
When facing a loss of direction, especially after a major life change, the solution isn't always to find a new grand goal. Instead, returning to the fundamental, controllable disciplines that initially built your confidence and passion (like a structured workout) can restore clarity and a sense of progress.
Adopt a new operating system for decision-making. Instead of evaluating choices based on an unattainable standard of perfection, filter every action through a simple question: does this choice result in forward progress, or does it keep me in a state of inaction? This reframes the goal from perfection to momentum.