The Daily Discipline from Project MNDST

Episode 86: Two-Way Doors: Jeff Bezos on Reversible Decisions

2 min · 22. juni 2026
episode Episode 86: Two-Way Doors: Jeff Bezos on Reversible Decisions cover

Beskrivelse

Today's episode teaches the Two-Way Door framework, introduced by Jeff Bezos in his two thousand fifteen Amazon shareholder letter: reversible decisions deserve speed, and only the truly irreversible ones deserve careful, extended deliberation. The episode walks through how this single distinction — one-way door versus two-way door — can free you from the slow-down trap that stalls capable people and whole organizations alike. Your one small action today: find a decision you've been circling, ask yourself honestly whether you can reverse it if you're wrong, and if the answer is yes, make the call. Key Topics: two-way door, one-way door, reversible decisions, decision-making, Jeff Bezos, mental models, clarity, agency Subscribe to The Daily Discipline for a daily reset on Clarity, one morning at a time.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af The Daily Discipline from Project MNDST-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

96 episoder

episode Episode 99: Satisficing: Why Good Enough Wins cover

Episode 99: Satisficing: Why Good Enough Wins

Today's episode teaches satisficing — the decision-making principle Herbert Simon introduced in the nineteen-fifties and Barry Schwartz later brought to life through his research on choice overload. The idea is simple and freeing: set a clear threshold, find the first option that clears it, and commit rather than endlessly searching for the perfect answer. Today's small action: before your next decision, write down the one or two criteria that would make a choice genuinely good enough — then commit to the first option that clears them. Key Topics: satisficing, maximizing, decision-making, Herbert Simon, Barry Schwartz, choice overload, bounded rationality, mental models Subscribe to The Daily Discipline for a daily reset on Clarity, one morning at a time.

15. juli 20263 min
episode Episode 95: Margin of Safety cover

Episode 95: Margin of Safety

Today's episode teaches Benjamin Graham's margin of safety — the principle that the gap between what something is worth and what you pay for it isn't just upside, it's protection against being wrong. Warren Buffett called it the three most important words in investing, but the idea works wherever forecasts meet reality: engineering, hiring, any decision made under uncertainty. The one action today is simple: take a decision you're working through and ask whether it still holds if your core assumption is twenty percent off. Key Topics: margin of safety, decision-making, mental models, Benjamin Graham, error management, judgment under uncertainty, risk and resilience Subscribe to The Daily Discipline for a daily reset on Clarity, one morning at a time.

9. juli 20262 min
episode Episode 94: The Stockdale Paradox cover

Episode 94: The Stockdale Paradox

Today's episode teaches the Stockdale Paradox — named by Jim Collins after Admiral James Stockdale, who endured years of captivity as a prisoner of war and emerged with a lesson that has nothing to do with wishful thinking: confront the brutal facts of your situation, and hold unwavering faith that you will prevail. These two things don't cancel each other out — they make each other more honest and more useful. Today's small action is simple: write down one hard fact you've been softening, then write one sentence of conviction about where you're headed — and let both be true at the same time. Key Topics: Stockdale Paradox, resilience, adversity, clarity, mental models, Jim Collins, self-honesty, agency Subscribe to The Daily Discipline for a daily reset on Clarity, one morning at a time.

8. juli 20262 min