How to Get Lucky, How to Get Good Luck & Ways to Get Lucky
Mar 9th, 2009 by admin
How to get lucky?
You get lucky when four elements align.
- A random collision of life’s interactions presents an opportunity to you.
- You are prepared to act upon the opportunity that has presented itself.
- Your character is such that you are empowered and willing to act to exploit the opportunity
- Your systems and techniques are such that you can exploit opportunities efficiently while mitigating risk
Therefore, The Pursuit of Luck is about:
- Taking action to interact more with life and forcing more random collisions
- Acting to change your brain, to change the way you think and to change the way you perceive the world so that you can force more random collisions
- Acting so you are prepared to efficiently exploit the opportunities that random collisions throw your way
- Building your character so that you willingly and fearlessly act to exploit opportunities.
- Acting to develop systems and techniques that create efficiency and risk mitigation
Below, I have set out a checklist divided into the five principles of The Pursuit of Luck. Like all good checklists it changes all the time. I add stuff, people write to me with great ideas and I add these too. So please be sure to visit this checklist again.
Principle #1 – Interact More with Life
To create more random collisions and force more opportunities to present themselves
- Break your routines
- Get off the beaten track – explore and bounce off new experiences and people
- Do odd stuff
- Hang out with odd people
- Challenge conventional wisdom
- Hang around fringe topics
- Tinker, experiment, practice trial and error – you don’t know what you don’t know. Adopt the Google 20% “own time”
- Be inquisitive and curious
- Don’t play by other people’s rules
- Don’t be afraid of ideas
- Publish and share your ideas and thoughts
- Leverage other peoples thoughts and luck through delegation and decentralization
- Persistently step up to the plate
- Just Ask
- Try Something New for 30 Days (Matt Cutts)
- Advertise your needs
- Patiently chip away at the cracks of “boulder-like” opportunities
- Be Eccentric
- Ignore what competitors are doing, do something that challenges
- Don’t do focus groups, your customers don’t know what they don’t know, do something that challenges
- Avoid excessive positive thinking
- Never ask / survey conventional wisdom sheep. They don’t know what they don’t know and all bleat the same bleat
- Train yourself and others around you in art of adaptability and re-invention
- Re-invent yourself
- Relax, be cool
- Learn in the trenches
- Pursue stretch goals
- Pursue passionately
- Avoid people wearing suits and elitists
- Keep others off balance and spread confusion in your wake
- Have conversations with people not discussions
- Create people “collisions”
- Avoid learning paralysis
- Never justify or rationalize
- Be thoughtful of others and the world around you
- Listen, do lots of listening
- Embrace simplicity
- Read, read, read. Read blogs, books, periodicals, magazines in your domain, sector, business type or career type. Read blogs, books, periodicals, magazines not in your domain, sector, business type or career type
- Train in unrelated fields
- Poke people in the eye – challenge their views, beliefs, routines and processes
- Grab the tiger by the tail – take on uncomfortable and difficult projects
- Pursue uncertainty
- Change your perspective (literally)
- Take sabbaticals and vacations
- Put yourself in underdog situations
- Mix up and vary your working, thinking and brainstorming environment
- Be yourself, develop a unique personal style, develop a narrative of yourself that you can leave up to and feel lucky because feeling lucky attracts luck
- Embrace technology
- Joke about sometimes
- Have a healthy disregard for the impossible
- Be skeptical
- Avoid premature congratulation
- Comprise is for politicians and diplomats only
- Travel
- Embrace irritation. Irritation is the prophet of the Innovation God
- When you look at life’s objects and practices, ask yourself the question “how would this work upside down, or in its opposite form?”
- Study and apply innovations and technology from sectors that are completely different to yours
- Hang around situations with scarce resources, scarcity breeds innovation
- Force random collision innovation by prodding using random objects, words, images, websites and concepts.
- Incremental improvement is admirable, but sometimes you need to leap into the uncertain.
- Listen to your imagination and dreams and embrace other people’s fiction and fantasy.
Principle # 2 – Change Your Brain
To create more random collisions by interacting with life differently
To see more opportunities because you perceive life differently
- Adjust your “Think Big Limiter”
- Learn a second language
- Write poetry
- Write a fictional story
- Learn to play an instrument, or a new instrument
- Listen to music, as many genres as you can
- Change your immediate environment
- Develop thought rapport, eg children, elderly, lazy, generation Y, retires, extreme environmentalists, extreme right wingers, socialists, feminists
Principle # 3- Be Prepared
So you can act rapidly when opportunity strikes
- Pull weeds
- Have cash on hand
- Do all the boring stuff, and before its due to be done
Principle # 4 – Building Your Character Traits
So you are prepared to take the leap into the unknown of opportunity exploitation
- Raise your self-esteem
- Eliminate your fear of embarrassment
- Embrace non-conformity
- Act Boldly
- Trust your instincts
- Enjoy and be proud of failure
- Have a purpose
- Thicken Your Skin
- Develop a “Do Whatever it Takes” attitude
- Believe in Yourself
- Commit
- Never Quit (but know when to quit, see Principle #16)
- Don’t Get Bitter, Get Successful
- Enjoy the Journey
Principle # 5- Have Systems and Techniques in Place
So that you quickly leap into exploiting the opportunities with “back of the napkin” plans
So that you mitigate risk
- The $5 calculator
- The back of the napkin business plan
- The two page business plan
- Talk to potential buyers, users, friends and enemies (5 minute phone calls)
- Avoid analysis paralysis
- Adopt a “Portfolio Approach”
- Avoid perfection paralysis
- Have a Point
- Just Do it
- Complexity is stupid, apply the KISS principle
- Take hedged risks with downside limits
- You can break even all day
- Ask for help
- Collaborate with others
- Leverage experts in their field
- Kill off the living dead
- Know when to quit
- Know when to be a committee of one
- Plan Quick
- Adapt Quick
Other Stuff You Need to Know about the The Pursuit of Luck Strategy
- The Three Contact States: Misfortune, Limbo & Opportunity
- The Leap-Increment Dichotomy
- The Disorder-System Dichotomy
- The Know When to Quit Dichotomy
- Your perception of luck
- Every juggler has a ball limit
- The 6th “P” of Marketing: Pursuit of Luck?
Contact the author, Business Consultant, Jason Bresnehan
hi there, thanx for your blog, looking at getting into it myself, just completed my first year of startup and though poor had a lot of fun, beginning the year with fresh eyes after a needed break. Feel i’ve got a lot to say myself, a little nervous but will jump in once i work out how to put a blog page on my web site, you helped me realise that i’m a bit of a perfectionist but now that i’ve actually completed the first product I now need to bog down and innovate and look at how i can monetise my idea and develop income streams from the site, (wanna help
any ideas?) love to chat with you about it if you’ve got time.
Cheers and thanx again
Marcus
I love this post! I am reading two excellent goods that look at how people can use a positive outlook in life to improve their work (and not the other way around) and how to improve our understanding of what makes us tick at work:
1) The happiness advantage, by Shawn Achor.
2) Getting unstuck, by Timothy Butler.
Some of your point above reminded me of the key messages of these books.
Cheers,
Silvia
Just wanted to say I like your posts. I share similar thoughts and views on much of what you’ve shared and thought I’d share http://www.231days.com – a project released for people trying to pursue their ideas and creativity and my personal creative portfolio – http://www.inpursuitofcreativity.com