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James Clear on Ideas

1 min · 7. touko 2026
jakson James Clear on Ideas kansikuva

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Every Olympic athlete wants to win gold. The goal isn't unique. James Clear makes this distinction in Atomic Habits: Goals are about the results you want. Systems are about the processes that get you there. Winners and losers often have the same goals. Every runner in the race wants to finish first. Every startup founder wants to build something big. The goal doesn't separate anyone. What separates them is the system. The daily process they've built. The habits that make progress inevitable instead of aspirational. Goals are good for setting direction. But systems are what actually move you forward. If you're not hitting your goals, you probably don't have a goal problem. You have a systems problem. Same goes for ideas. We all have ideas we say we'll work on "someday." But without a system — a time, a place, a process — someday never comes.

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jakson Grace Hopper on Ideas kansikuva

Grace Hopper on Ideas

The most dangerous phrase in any organization is "we've always done it this way." I'm diving into thinkers who've shaped how we understand ideas. This week: Grace Hopper. She was a Navy Rear Admiral and one of the first computer programmers in history. She invented the first compiler, which made it possible for humans to write code in something closer to plain English. She helped create COBOL, a programming language still running bank systems today. Here's what I love about Hopper: she made the abstract tangible. When Admirals asked why satellite communication took so long, she didn't give them a technical lecture. She handed them a piece of wire — 11.8 inches long — and said: "This is a nanosecond. This is the maximum distance electricity can travel in a billionth of a second. Between here and the satellite, there are a very large number of these." She also lived by this: "It's easier to ask forgiveness than permission." She didn't wait for approval. She built things, solved problems, and figured out the politics later. In a rigid military hierarchy, she found ways to move fast by simply doing the work first. Most of us are held back not by bad ideas, but by waiting for someone to tell us it's okay to try them. We defer to "how it's always been done" because it feels safer than defending something new. Hopper's whole career was a rejection of that instinct.

Eilen1 min
jakson Brené Brown on Ideas kansikuva

Brené Brown on Ideas

The cheap seats are full of critics who never step onto the floor. Brené Brown references Theodore Roosevelt's "Man in the Arena" speech: The credit belongs to the person whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood. Not the ones watching from a safe distance. You can choose courage or you can choose comfort. But you can't have both. So be selective about whose feedback you let in. If someone's not in the arena getting their ass kicked too, their opinion doesn't count. Every idea you share requires vulnerability. You're putting something into the world before you know if it will work. That's not weakness. That's the only way anything gets made. The people who criticize from the cheap seats have one thing in common: they're not building anything. They're not risking anything. They're just... watching. Next time you're holding back an idea, ask yourself: Whose criticism am I letting stop me? Are they even in the arena?

28. touko 20261 min
jakson Annie Duke on Ideas kansikuva

Annie Duke on Ideas

You can do everything right and still lose the hand. This comes from Annie Duke who won millions at the poker table and still lost hands. In poker, "resulting" is a death sentence. If you play a perfect hand but the river card goes against you, you don't change your strategy—you trust your process. Duke brought this logic to the world of decision-making, and it’s a masterclass in how to handle ideas. Most of us work backward. We see a bad result and assume we were wrong. But in an uncertain world, a good idea with a bad outcome is still a good idea. Strategy is about making the best possible bet with the information you have at the time. If you let the "randomness of results" dictate your next move, you’re no longer in control of your strategy—the luck is.

21. touko 20261 min
jakson Clayton Christensen on Ideas kansikuva

Clayton Christensen on Ideas

The most dangerous ideas don't look irrelevant. Clayton Christensen called this the innovator's dilemma. The best companies don't fail because they're lazy or stupid. They fail because they're too good at what they already do. They listen to customers. Invest in improvements. Chase higher margins. All the right moves. And it kills them. Disruptive ideas almost never look good at first. They're cheaper, simpler, worse by traditional metrics. Existing customers don't want them. The margins are terrible. Every rational analysis says ignore it. So the smart companies do. In 2000, Netflix offered itself to Blockbuster for $50 million. Blockbuster passed. They were making $800 million a year in late fees alone. Why would they care about some DVD-by-mail startup? Today Netflix is worth over $150 billion. Blockbuster filed for bankruptcy. The pattern is everywhere. The threat isn't the idea that looks dangerous. It's the one that looks too small to matter.

14. touko 20261 min
jakson James Clear on Ideas kansikuva

James Clear on Ideas

Every Olympic athlete wants to win gold. The goal isn't unique. James Clear makes this distinction in Atomic Habits: Goals are about the results you want. Systems are about the processes that get you there. Winners and losers often have the same goals. Every runner in the race wants to finish first. Every startup founder wants to build something big. The goal doesn't separate anyone. What separates them is the system. The daily process they've built. The habits that make progress inevitable instead of aspirational. Goals are good for setting direction. But systems are what actually move you forward. If you're not hitting your goals, you probably don't have a goal problem. You have a systems problem. Same goes for ideas. We all have ideas we say we'll work on "someday." But without a system — a time, a place, a process — someday never comes.

7. touko 20261 min