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Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily · Dec 8, 2025

Rethink risk. Learn how small creative risks build team trust and how systematic frameworks manage existential threats to your organization.

Evaluate Creative Contributions on Intent and Curiosity, Not Polished Execution

To encourage participation from everyone, leaders should focus on the 'why' behind an idea (intention) and ask curious questions rather than judging the final output. This levels the playing field by rewarding effort and thoughtfulness over innate talent, making it safe for people to share imperfect ideas.

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger thumbnail

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily·2 months ago

Fix System Flaws Before Blaming Human Error for Poor Performance

Exceptional people in flawed systems will produce subpar results. Before focusing on individual performance, leaders must ensure the underlying systems are reliable and resilient. As shown by the Southwest Airlines software meltdown, blaming employees for systemic failures masks the root cause and prevents meaningful improvement.

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger thumbnail

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily·2 months ago

Effective Risk Management Requires Distinguishing Between Seeing and Understanding Threats

Leaders often conflate seeing a risk with understanding it. In 2020, officials saw COVID-19 but didn't understand its airborne spread. Conversely, society understands the risk of drunk driving but fails to see it most of the time. Truly managing risk requires addressing both visibility and comprehension.

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger thumbnail

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily·2 months ago

Foster Psychological Safety by Engineering Small, Intentional Risks

Instead of avoiding risk, teams build trust by creating a 'safe danger' zone for manageable risks, like sharing a half-baked idea. This process of successfully navigating small vulnerabilities rewires fear into trust and encourages creative thinking, proving that safety and danger are more like 'dance partners' than opposites.

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger thumbnail

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily·2 months ago

Build a 'Just Culture' by Treating Unintentional Errors and Deliberate Choices Differently

A 'blame and shame' culture develops when all bad outcomes are punished equally, chilling employee reporting. To foster psychological safety, leaders must distinguish between unintentional mistakes (errors) and conscious violations (choices). A just response to each builds a culture where people feel safe admitting failures.

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger thumbnail

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily·2 months ago

Most Corporate Team-Building Fails Because It Reinforces Existing Social Hierarchies

Common team-building activities like happy hours or escape rooms often fail because they allow existing dynamics to persist: the loud get louder, cliques huddle together, and nothing new is revealed. Effective team building must intentionally break these patterns to foster new connections and build genuine trust.

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger thumbnail

Your Life Could Use a Little More Danger

The Next Big Idea Daily·2 months ago