What's Your Edge?

The Science of Luck

6 min · 24 jul 2025
aflevering The Science of Luck artwork

Beschrijving

Recently, it seems luck has become the go-to explanation for both success and failure. I hear it again and again - in coaching sessions and casual coffee chats. When it comes to success, luck is a convenient explanation. The success of others? They got lucky. Your own success? If you want to appear humble, you just point to luck again. It’s the polite thing to do. And when things don’t go your way? You didn’t get the [deal / job / promotion]? How easy to blame bad luck. The flipside is this: some of the most successful people I know insist on making their own luck. And there’s good scientific backing for that stance.

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aflevering Get back between 7.5 -10 hours per week (three levers that move the needle) artwork

Get back between 7.5 -10 hours per week (three levers that move the needle)

The world seems so much busier and full of noise these days. You're probably busier than ever too. And if you're hoping for AI to solve the busyness problem, that doesn't seem to be happening anytime soon. According to a recent Harvard Business Review article, first studies show that AI tools don't seem to reduce work, but consistently intensify it! They cite task expansion, blurred boundaries between work and non-work, and more multitasking/ context switching as the main culprits. In my coaching practice, I like to challenge clients to free up between 7.5 - 10 hours per week from "busy work" and to redirect them into 2-3 key projects that truly move the needle (or just to return some of it to family, health, and recovery).

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