Here is the uncomfortable question: How much of your time do you spend on the type of problem only you can solve? Or do you spend too much of it on problems that other people can solve without you?
A surprising number of problems resolve themselves. Have you ever gone on holiday and got an email about something that needs attending. And by the time you're back it's resolved. Some problems don't need you, they need time. You're not that critical to most problems.
Autopilot mode seeps into everything. It governs how we see problems, opportunities, people and possibilities. Our expectations drive our thoughts far more than our perception.
Your brain is a filtering machine. Without this, the sheer volume of data would paralyse you. This was true even before the onslaught of social media and AI.
But the efficiency comes at a cost.
We operate on autopilot - all the time.
Your brain filters out 99.99% of reality
Every second, your senses process about 1 gigabit of information. Only 100 bits make it through to conscious thought. The rest gets filtered out as irrelevant noise.
As more and more noise enters the system - there is another skill that will be even more useful. And that's the ability to create signal in a world of noise. Not just to be noticed, but to be remarkable.
In the past, the skill of good decision-making was the ability to extract signal from noise. And with so much AI generated "noise" that skill is going to become even more valuable.
What does being the exception mean?
- Thinking differently
- Recognising assumptions
- Testing conventional wisdom
- Thinking for yourself to figure out what works