Iconoclast Insights

The Question You're Not Asking

14 min · Gestern
Episode The Question You're Not Asking Cover

Beschreibung

The engineers using AI to write code are working more hours than they ever have. Sleep-deprived. Ecstatic. Marc Andreessen called it the AI vampire — developers managing twenty agents in parallel, too afraid to sleep because the opportunity cost is too high. Nobody predicted this. Not the economists who model automation. Not the people who forecast mass unemployment, and not the people who predicted a four-day week. Both camps had coherent logic. Both got the outcome wrong. And the reason has nothing to do with information or intelligence — it has to do with the frame they were thinking inside. This episode is about frame traps: when the question you're asking is logically sound, internally consistent, and wrong — not because your reasoning fails, but because the question belongs to a different situation than the one you're actually in. A café owner spending years optimizing coffee sales inside an experience business. Tim Denning waiting years for permission that was never required. Economists running fixed-demand models in an elastic-demand market. The mechanism is identical in all three cases. So is the fix. Iconoclast Insights is André Daus — strategic opposition, uncomfortable questions, no comfortable answers.

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Alle Folgen

65 Folgen

Episode The Question You're Not Asking Cover

The Question You're Not Asking

The engineers using AI to write code are working more hours than they ever have. Sleep-deprived. Ecstatic. Marc Andreessen called it the AI vampire — developers managing twenty agents in parallel, too afraid to sleep because the opportunity cost is too high. Nobody predicted this. Not the economists who model automation. Not the people who forecast mass unemployment, and not the people who predicted a four-day week. Both camps had coherent logic. Both got the outcome wrong. And the reason has nothing to do with information or intelligence — it has to do with the frame they were thinking inside. This episode is about frame traps: when the question you're asking is logically sound, internally consistent, and wrong — not because your reasoning fails, but because the question belongs to a different situation than the one you're actually in. A café owner spending years optimizing coffee sales inside an experience business. Tim Denning waiting years for permission that was never required. Economists running fixed-demand models in an elastic-demand market. The mechanism is identical in all three cases. So is the fix. Iconoclast Insights is André Daus — strategic opposition, uncomfortable questions, no comfortable answers.

Gestern14 min
Episode The War Nobody Declared Cover

The War Nobody Declared

Angela Merkel just received the European Parliament's first Order of Merit — and used the occasion to call for regulation of "lies" on social media. Without defining what a lie is. That missing definition is the entire problem. Because in a world where questioning the 1.5°C climate threshold makes you a climate denier, where asking why a quarter of Germans vote AfD makes you an extremist, where complexity about Ukraine makes you Putin-friendly — the regulation of "lies" doesn't protect democracy. It protects whatever ideology is holding the pen when the rules get written. This episode is about the mechanism behind the label. The way any sufficiently entrenched belief system — political, corporate, social — stops engaging with questions and starts disqualifying the people who ask them. And what it actually means to defend free speech when the war being fought isn't the one anyone declared. Iconoclast Insights is André Daus — strategic opposition, uncomfortable questions, no comfortable answers.

27. Mai 202612 min
Episode The Constructive Trap Cover

The Constructive Trap

Everyone has heard it. From politicians. From HR directors. From well-meaning colleagues. Be more constructive. Work harder. Adapt. But what if that advice is making the problem worse? In this episode, I argue that telling someone to work harder when they're already working their hardest isn't encouragement — it's a diagnosis error. The people stuck in today's job market aren't failing to try. They're failing to find traction. Those are different problems with different solutions. Prescribing effort for a traction failure is like telling someone with a broken leg to walk it off. Toxic positivity isn't just a morale issue. When it becomes the default response to systemic failure, it shuts off the instruments people use to read their situation accurately. The people who get the diagnosis right start to look like complainers. The ones who keep smiling through a broken strategy start to look like leaders. You've inverted the incentives — and now your organisation can't learn. This episode is for business leaders and for anyone who feels something is off but can't quite name it yet. Three shifts. None of them require a transformation.

20. Mai 202614 min
Episode Follow Your Passion Is Why So Many People Feel Lost Cover

Follow Your Passion Is Why So Many People Feel Lost

"Follow your passion" is one of the most repeated pieces of career advice in existence. It's also one of the least examined. I paid a personal branding agency good money to help me find my direction. Their best output was that phrase. Generic, dressed up as strategy — and completely disconnected from who I actually am. In this episode I'm not arguing the idea is entirely wrong. I'm arguing the sequence is. Passion doesn't lead to mastery. Mastery leads to passion. And most people who are still waiting for the clarity of "this is my calling" aren't missing something — they were given the wrong map. What actually works: stop asking what you're passionate about. Start asking what you're able to carry well — and carry it long enough for something to emerge from it. The meaning comes after the work. Not before. Think before you act.

6. Mai 202613 min