Leadership Economics
Aaron and Spencer turn the AIME framework into a working playbook, walking through the six economic principles every leader actually uses: opportunity cost, marginal thinking, incentives, trade and trust, information, and command and control. Episode two of Leadership Economics. Aaron and Spencer build on the AIME framework from the pilot and lay out the six economic principles that turn it into a working playbook — the tools every leader actually reaches for. The episode walks through each principle with examples ranging from the sunk-cost trap of a deteriorating boat to a randomized Army recruitment experiment that saved tens of millions of dollars. What we cover * A quick AIME recap (Allocation, Information, Motivation, Execution) and why the framework needs a playbook of working principles underneath * Principle 1: trade-offs and opportunity cost — every choice closes other doors * Principle 2: marginal analysis — sunk costs are sunk; the next dollar is the only one that matters * Principle 3: incentives matter, and they go far beyond money — culture, identity, and meaning all signal what people pursue * Principle 4: trade is a win-win, and it runs on trust — markets and relationships work the same way * Principle 5: information clears the market — read what people are doing, build structures that surface honest signals, and design real experiments * Principle 6: command and control — the centralized-vs-decentralized trade-off and the principal-agent problem in mission command Mentioned * Ray Dalio, Principles — radical honesty as a cultural mechanism for surfacing bad news * Black Hearts and the West Point MX400 leadership curriculum — mission command, principal-agent failure, decentralization * Carl von Clausewitz — the fog of war as a metaphor for information under uncertainty * Adam Smith — the invisible hand and coordination through self-interest Subscribe to the newsletter — one short essay every other Tuesday: leadershipeconomics.com [https://leadershipeconomics.com/]
4 episodios
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