Did this video help you think differently about decision making?
@masternobody18965 жыл бұрын
Now I can make decisions and buy your course
@TaylorWheeler5 жыл бұрын
Yes, also your La Croix hat is dope - cheers
@GARSOWNAGE5 жыл бұрын
I can tell this video would be very helpful but its pretty long for some people to be watching for 90 mins. for these longer vids you have maybe throw the audio on a podcast? bet it would increase your viewership too. just a thought, cheers
@masternobody18965 жыл бұрын
Sam oven is dope and best
@AmishPatel5 жыл бұрын
"If you were actually copying me, you'd do something different" SLAM!
@thattimestampguy2 жыл бұрын
1:46 Reduce the amount of decisions to conserve energy, a scarce resource. • Decision Fatigue 😮💨 • Do Less Stuff 5:06 Sacrifice to win the game ♟ 7:04 Make 1 decision that solves future decisions 9:43 Food 11:04 Have A Simple Personal Life 14:47 More Stuff = More Worries 17:50 Low Maintenance 19:38 Limit Surface Area 21:37 NOTIFICATION OVERLOAD Part 2: Think Critically, don’t just follow the crowd 25:50 26:58 Do your own analysis 🧐 30:57 Parts that form the Whole, take what’s important, ignore what’s not important to you. 33:37 Core Principles 37:52 Look At Decision Patterns MVP - Minimum Viable Product Part 3 Apply To Models 47:11 49:30 Long Term 10-many years 1:04:00 TV = Wasted Time 1:06:17 Dependency and Sequencing
@CrossBS2 жыл бұрын
Thanks man
@vishalnangare315 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏.
@WhiteBoardFinance5 жыл бұрын
Sam is a legend
@MikeBarron14 жыл бұрын
We can all be a legend if we wanted to brother!
@die90x242 жыл бұрын
Who came here from Hamza?🙋🏻♂️ I watched this last year, and I still got something out of it this time as my life circumstances change. Thank you Sam! You’re the G!
@olivercurtis1912 жыл бұрын
adonissssss
@Nicoo_oooo2 жыл бұрын
And youtuber called Hamza recommended your video and I thoroughly enjoyed it and learned much from it. Thank you.
@davidbakino6175 жыл бұрын
"After I watch TV, my mind is trying to problem-solve and connect the dots between the fictional characters in the different shows that I've watched, MORE than it's trying to solve my own immediate problems" ----> Genius! That's the netfilx society we live in! People are tricked into caring about fake stories more than their own fucking life!!
@channel1channelone5 жыл бұрын
David Bakino ahahahaha :)) yeah, i get the same thing :))
@robertoangelini60895 жыл бұрын
Gossip started first :).
@Scienceprovedinquran4 жыл бұрын
Are you interested in any online course from the best mentors like (Grant Cardone ,tai lopez , Jordan belfort , Dan Lok, Russell Brunson , Kevin David , Jason capital , Neil Patel, Billy gene, Alex Becker , Iman ghadzi , Sam ovens , Jim Kwik , Ryan Stewart , Eric Worre and so much more) . . . I am here to save you alot of money and time and effort to get the right information to grow your business. . I have more than 1000 courses for the best mentors in the world . 16TB of courses for 200$ One course will be for 30$ . And you can check every course by yourself before you buy anything. Visit : Mentorscourses101.com send email to mentorscourses101@gmail.com for proof For an extra 20% discount use code : DODO20
@Daniel-lt7rx2 жыл бұрын
well thats what they are supposed to do cause we humans like to escape from things instead of facing them it might be emotional problems or some other kinds of barriers .. most of the time watching movies or playing games arent "entertainment" they are just distractions from the real world pain and struggles
@MikeOBrienMedia5 жыл бұрын
Sam, you're a very skilled critical thinker (on your entire channel, not just this video). I appreciate your perspective. Keep up the great content!
@prophetessana1453 жыл бұрын
yes .He is a consultant.Consultancy is about critical thinking.It is a natural skill ...
@gangrakar Жыл бұрын
00:00 🛤️ Reduce Load: Making good decisions starts with reducing the number of decisions you have to make. 10:08 🗺️ Limit Surface Area: Limit the number of ways information and demands can reach you. 24:10 📞 Managing Communication Channels 25:19 🌟 Part 1: Preparing for Decision-Making 25:55 🤔 Part 2: Thinking Critically 33:17 🏆 Part 3: Applying Core Values/Principles 38:16 🔍 Part 4: Recognizing Decision Patterns 47:21 🧠 Part 5: Applying Mental Models 48:16 🌟 Setting Clear Goals 52:32 ⏳ Calculating Half-Life of Decisions 56:17 🤝 Hiring the Right People 01:01:05 🔄 Considering Second-Order Consequences 01:06:17 🏗️ Considering Dependencies and Sequencing 01:10:38 ↔️ Weighing Input and Output Symmetry 01:11:37 ⚖️ Assessing Decision Symmetry 01:14:19 🎲 Evaluating Risk and Ease of Undoing 01:19:31 📉 Countering Decision Troughs with Inverse Curves 01:22:36 🧠 Summarizing Decision-Making Principles
@chbikchpok76025 жыл бұрын
Thank you from Tunisia, I'm a muslim and i respect this dude a lot.
@JeffreyMarr5 жыл бұрын
Happy birthday Sam. Thanks for telling me I can't blame where I am in life on other people like I have been.
@Randomdude-i8x5 жыл бұрын
Well you can blame them, and they might be responsible and have blame for the problem, but you're the one responsible to fix it! So you're doing great sitting here, watching Sam ;)
@blank0032 жыл бұрын
@@Randomdude-i8x a9#,e
@deathwounds36042 жыл бұрын
thanks hamza, i really needed this
@Senecamarcus5 жыл бұрын
Its interesting that Seneca had these ideas centuries ago, thats why I love old books! People in the past had a lot of less distractions to think deep and come up with deep ideas!
@HesterLiong5 жыл бұрын
wow so true! agree
@animator-k7002 Жыл бұрын
I cant believe this is free❤️ Much love and respect brother🤝
@florianwueest5 жыл бұрын
The free content that you're presenting Sam is just WAY above what you find in the normal "business" industry. Very good stuff!
@suchapolivka870711 ай бұрын
This video has a fucking ton of value! My notes: Reduce load 1. Make less decisions - decision fatigue 2. Do less stuff - sacrifice - like in chess - say no, more than yes 3. Make one decision that removes future decisions - same cloths every day or at least have it planned and do the same thing all the time, with food too - delivery 4. simple personal life - relationships, hobbies… - don't increase lifestyle (buying useless stuff) after getting rich 1. Low maintenance partner - love isn't ownership and there are more important things 5. Limit surface area - how are things distracting you throughout the day (notifications…) - eliminate everything and make everything as effective as possible Think critically 1. Do your own analysis and don't copy others - question everything - if everybody else does it, it's probably the wrong thing to do - in the beginning learn from others though - copy the GOATs 1. All the successful people did something different than others and were ridiculed at the beginning 2. Don't copy the crowd - Minimum viable wedding - only do the things that actually makes sense and are important - MVP - Lean startup 3. Core principles and values - take time to define them - use them to make decisions aligned with your mission - whole company needs to know it 4. Decision patterns - analyze decisions of people (also yours) that they made long ago and look for patterns - does it lead to something great or terrible? Apply mental models 1. Define the goal - the north start to know where you are going - all your actions must lead to this goal 2. Think long-term - decades - both in every day life and while setting goals 3. Project decision options - project where the decisions take me (if it gets me closer to my long term goal) 4. Calculate half life - When will I have to do this decision again? Can I just erase making this decision out of my life? 5. Second order consequences - make decisions that pay dividends instead of making you decay - what is going to happen after the decision was made 1. Second, third, fourth… 2. make it dramatic: If i eat this chocolate, I will get fat, which will make me dumb and sluggish, which will make me not achieve my goal and that makes my life miserable. Is it worth eating? - also use the other way around - if I worked whole day… 6. Dependencies and sequence - look at it from a longer perspective - What is the most efficient sequence of doing tasks? What projects depend on other ones (- do those first)? 7. Input and output symmetry - weigh how much you have to put in and how much you get out - ideally you input 1 and output 10 8. Risk, ease of undo - make sure that the reward and chance of achieving it outweigh the cost of failing. Also look at how difficult is to undone the decision 9. Counteract trough - start with a project that brings rewards in the short-term and then let it fuel a bigger project that brings the fruits only after a long time (Consulting.com made Skool possible and then was sold)
@saspry5 жыл бұрын
"(low maintenance partner is key)" BOOM! Mic drop here :) So true!!!
@pavloseleftheriou64625 жыл бұрын
wooaaaau!!!
@dhruvmehta8908 Жыл бұрын
One of the only videos I have ever taken the time to comment on - Absolutely brilliant work.
@martinlilly Жыл бұрын
After watching this video, I am left thinking that this stuff sounds so obvious, yet I have never learned to do it, or thought about doing it. And that is true for most people I know. It is amazing what sitting down and critically thinking about your principles and how you live your life can make you concsious to the tasks you should be doing more off, and cutting off a lot of irrelevant noise that exists in your life. Thanks Sam, very well presented as always.
@redvik22194 жыл бұрын
I have no idea why some people think he's a scam. I find his free content so valuable.
@relavilrodford92725 жыл бұрын
i love how this guy make's a fu*cking 1:24 hour video on making a decisions
@channel1channelone5 жыл бұрын
Well, its important stuff! :)) all the decisions can guide the person to a totally different course in life...
@Sergey-tq9ri4 жыл бұрын
Even that is very low for such an important topic
@saminmostahid73433 жыл бұрын
And still it begs more time! What a man and content.
@tharunmohan92932 жыл бұрын
Hamza revolution ✊
@POPDATA2 жыл бұрын
It’s true 6:00 sometimes you gotta sacrifice the time you dedicate to getting better at something like social skills or getting in perfect shape in order to achieve something more meaningful in your life. Life is all about sacrifices. There’s a cost of opportunity behind every outcome. But never sacrifice your energy boosters: love, fitness, good sleep, water, right food, meditation. Stimulation and instant gratification after ego depletion is important too… but never resort to unhealthy habits like porn, alcohol, drug, binge watching, overeating, doom scrolling… instead, take a nice bath, practice relaxation techniques, go for a nice walk, play with your pet, play mind stimulating board games, talk to a friend, play music, take a nap, read a book, interactive family/friend games… that’s how you recharge in a healthy way
@samueldantas68175 жыл бұрын
Keep up with the summarize part at the end of your videos. I like to listen first then take notes when I understand the concepts. Thanks Sam!
@lessandra6025 жыл бұрын
Insane. I’ve just been needing exactly this type of video for a while. Tried again today and you’ve uploaded 16 hours ago. Great channel! Happy birthday, Sam!
@ShaneHummus5 жыл бұрын
After watching this, it made me think about how did I make my decision from the past. Now, I think I can make good decisions.
@mariomontes27645 жыл бұрын
Funny how you say this, and the video is +1hour long, uploaded 3 minutes ago. Way convincing brother!
@him44405 жыл бұрын
Shane Hummus - The Success GPS bro, it just came out.
@ShaneHummus5 жыл бұрын
@@mariomontes2764 I checked the description box and saw the contents of the video on it.
@ShaneHummus5 жыл бұрын
@@him4440 the parts of the content is in the description box.
@langris84619 ай бұрын
Here cause of Charlie Morgan, Like how teachings can be altered and made easier to understand by your desiples. Thank you
@mangarares10 ай бұрын
P1 is straight up the most important and often easy to overlook. Good vid
@ShaadMulla5 жыл бұрын
One of my friends has a history of making bad decisions. Big ones. If I look at him from a fractal pattern kind of way he continues to make bad decisions even for little things. Like ordering completely wacked up food order in a restaurant that nobody tends to like. Also understanding repeatable patterns in myself has helped me pivot from the bad ones. Understanding good patterns also gives confidence and tells me where I am headed in the future. Thus simplifying decision making.
@reidrichardson15512 жыл бұрын
This really takes the anxiety out of decision-making. I love how Sam simplifies everything.
@michaelgaineriii69865 жыл бұрын
Sam back at it again with another explosive video. Aspiring entrepreneurs who watch your videos are extremely advantageous if they apply these principles.
@neel36653 жыл бұрын
This person is a GENIUS.
@mediadon65455 жыл бұрын
Really love your mental models - I can say you changed my life by using the long term and 2nd order consequences, happy to see there are even more mental models to be learnt, thanks alot Sam, your a mentor to alot of entrepreneurs without even knowing it
@ShadaeBalancesKnightAstro2 жыл бұрын
Also the video that introduced me to Sam as well, great info he provides. His content is life changing for those us who are totally open, honest and willing to work towards excellence.
@The_Dapper_Millennial10 ай бұрын
This is so brilliant, and so simple at the same time. The most successful people don’t ever NOT do the basics.
@jeffkhoza9 ай бұрын
After four years of it being released it is still valuable today. thank you keep it up.
@m.aurelius2 жыл бұрын
Here from hamza Great video
@JustinHouser5 жыл бұрын
Saying “no” is such a crucial part of living a more productive life. It’s tough, though, as so many “experts” say to hustle and say yes to everything that comes your way. There is even a book called “Yes Man.” Practically thinking, it is a very destructive habit to develop. Awesome advice Sam!
@ricokalam41132 жыл бұрын
I want to read that book. Do you know the writer?
@LTV9995 жыл бұрын
Sam you are brilliant! You saved my life! Thank you so much for everything!!
@Scienceprovedinquran4 жыл бұрын
Are you interested in any online course from the best mentors like (Grant Cardone ,tai lopez , Jordan belfort , Dan Lok, Russell Brunson , Kevin David , Jason capital , Neil Patel, Billy gene, Alex Becker , Iman ghadzi , Sam ovens , Jim Kwik , Ryan Stewart , Eric Worre and so much more) . . . I am here to save you alot of money and time and effort to get the right information to grow your business. . I have more than 1000 courses for the best mentors in the world . 16TB of courses for 200$ One course will be for 30$ . And you can check every course by yourself before you buy anything. Visit : Mentorscourses101.com send email to mentorscourses101@gmail.com for proof For an extra 20% discount use code : DODO20
@evanb94195 жыл бұрын
Extremely good value. Severely underrated
@anandasaad9091 Жыл бұрын
Please keep making more videos like this. Life-changing. Thanks mate.
@oranjelicht4 жыл бұрын
the best video i have seen in ages. thank you sam. also your paid ads are amazing. thank you so very much
@vignolivoice Жыл бұрын
One of the best videos on KZbin by far. Thank you Sam 👏🏻👏🏻
@WeddingVideographyTips5 жыл бұрын
DUDE .... i needed this video Today.. going thru some shit.. got a lot of work on my hands and this video really gave me clarity on how to execute. Thanks for another GREAT video Sam. You're a Legend.
@JosePerez-xf3ux5 жыл бұрын
I feel the tremendous need of applause your knowledge, this is gold, but not any kind of gold, an optimized gold.
@mikeylorenzio20765 жыл бұрын
13:25 "you cant let your byproducts of your thing, distract you from your thing". Holy shit... I've always done this.
@realMartinHamilton5 жыл бұрын
This is super genius. How the heck did you learn this Sam!? Wow man, this is stellar. This explains everything in business and life. I've been slow at decision making all my life. Many times indecisive. This is definitely a cure. Thank you!
@petresilegov25815 жыл бұрын
Martin Hamilton this is the type of stuff that Buffett and Munger teach
@Miguel-dg7ql5 жыл бұрын
I would appreciate a video about how to focus time and energy into getting results rather than just completing tasks or to-do lists.
@99fenton3 жыл бұрын
That’s exactly what he’s doing but your missing it
@JustinHouser5 жыл бұрын
"JUST SAY NO!" 1) The real importance of saying NO lies in putting yourself first and knowing what is important to you. It is also about understanding that you have the right to live the best life possible. 2) Boundaries in a relationship are not bad, but simply a way to tell the other person what you like/dislike and how you expect to be treated. Saying NO is the essential piece of setting these boundaries.
Pure 💎💎💎 Thank you so much for this. Gained a lot of value. Am also so happy I saw this video recommended by Hamza. Super grateful for this video. Thank you!🤝♥️
@MVPriyank4 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for the very detailed and valuable video. It will surely help me in making right decisions and good productivity
@chadwickharding69835 жыл бұрын
I love your ability to simplify process and inspire to focus & rid distractions. You are calm in delivery which is calming for the listener. How many lives have you lived on this planet? There’s too much wisdom for this to be your first time here! Loved the value this video provided. Immense load, for no cost. Amazing.
@Scienceprovedinquran4 жыл бұрын
Are you interested in any online course from the best mentors like (Grant Cardone ,tai lopez , Jordan belfort , Dan Lok, Russell Brunson , Kevin David , Jason capital , Neil Patel, Billy gene, Alex Becker , Iman ghadzi , Sam ovens , Jim Kwik , Ryan Stewart , Eric Worre and so much more) . . . I am here to save you alot of money and time and effort to get the right information to grow your business. . I have more than 1000 courses for the best mentors in the world . 16TB of courses for 200$ One course will be for 30$ . And you can check every course by yourself before you buy anything. Visit : Mentorscourses101.com send email to mentorscourses101@gmail.com for proof For an extra 20% discount use code : DODO20
@dreamweaver144 жыл бұрын
This is one of the most underrated videos on KZbin
@SelvaticFab5 жыл бұрын
I subscribed the free trial on your online course on Consulting.com today after watching this video!
@marcellowingchun3 жыл бұрын
Best 1 1/2 hours I could have spent at this time in my life. Thanks Sam.
@augrezchimaobi35724 жыл бұрын
I really want to appreciate you for this video, it sharpened my mind and I hope to give you feedback once I put it to work, that's the goal for 2021
@sebastianshine42624 жыл бұрын
This video is the kind of stuff you would usually be extremely pessimistic about. It's the equivalent of finding a bunch of money on the street and just picking it up without consequences lol Probably the best video I have ever seen on KZbin. Surely among the top 3. Not only an important topic, but also the thought process behind it is very very well filtered you can tell. And the explanations are on point so you can follow so well. Now the only thing that needs to be done is repeating this over time. You could never apply all the value that is provided here at once. Downloaded it on the phone even before I was done and actually the last third was even more insane than the rest Sam ovens the kind of guy that if he was selling me something I would thank him :D
@lookintothesky1235 жыл бұрын
Sam's wife and parents have to message him on Slack lol
@frotleet54124 жыл бұрын
lookintothesky123 😂
@exoticblondestripper3 жыл бұрын
Whats a slack?
@SantiYounger Жыл бұрын
yeah that's hilarious
@kailtis11 ай бұрын
Mental Models : 1 Define Goal 2. Think Long Term 3. Project Decision/vector Options 4. Calculate Half-Life of Decisions 5. Second Order Consequences 6. Consider Dependencies and Sequences (Unlocking scaling inputs into outsized outputs, often comes from focusing on one thing, not twenty) 7. Input Output Symmetry 8. Consider Risk & Ease of Undo 9. Counteract Throughs
@satishtrimukhe56 ай бұрын
Thanks, Sam. Making the right decisions is a critical area in our life. You precisely explained all about it at the micro level. Based on this video one can make the right decision and get good long-term results.😀
@bouboubaba92142 жыл бұрын
No bs, simple yet clear, verry helpfull. Thank you !
@janiprime5 жыл бұрын
Decision fatigue is very real and i've noticed and tracked how my perfoemence has been when i dont have to make many decisions especially first thing in the morning before i start working.
@catalinmihai9092 жыл бұрын
Thank you for you effort and the quality information!
@themogulshaneil5 жыл бұрын
I think another way to do it as well in terms of merging the half life, MVP & reducing loads concept can be deciding on a specific time to make those recurring decisions. So for example use an hour on a Saturday to pick out outfits for the coming week. Especially because not everyone’s industry makes sense to wear the same shirt daily for 10years - for example the beauty industry and things like confidence and also because some people (aka me) actually enjoy self expression through clothing. But instead of taking an hour a day to figure it out, I use an hr on the weekend to decide in advance. I actually grew up wearing a uniform to school so there was no decision fatigue around clothing BUT I had to iron my uniforms and so instead of ironing one each morning I would batch iron on a Sunday so I could just grab and go. So I think a similar concept and a great midpoint and minimum viable outfit lol with a longer half life than just deciding daily. Plus it allows people who enjoy that to do something they actually enjoy without feeling they can’t do what they love 😊 plus when you feel you look good... you feel good - it’s like a nice refreshing shower 🥰 . A way to do it with food can also be setting the meal plan for the coming week or coming 2 weeks. In my household we do “monthly grocery” depending on what the vibe for the month is (for example summer cuisine is very different than winter), that way there’s a longer half life and load reduction but with the ability to be flexible and creative and enjoy the process of food if food brings you joy
@Hooponoponosrinivas4 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for sharing such valuable lessons. You made me understand that we are wasting so much time energy and mental power in making tiny decisions of day to day life. Thank you thank you thanks a lot.
@AbhishekVerma-ed3ub3 жыл бұрын
One of the best video I have watched so far.
@armandojacoxjr.placeholder59545 жыл бұрын
I enjoy the simplified approach to analytical thinking. The video helped me with actual decisions i have to make. Some feedback for you is there was not much said on the power of our emotions in our decisionmaking amd strategies for dealing with them.
@stevejanejamesjassteph59032 жыл бұрын
REALLY Good mate! Like stuff we all know instinctively but ignore. Well said bro! Thank you... So helpful
@smiling.stree.society2 ай бұрын
for the first time I saw your video and this has helped me alot about everything in my life.... given the ease to live
@devenodell74525 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing Sam. I can't stop watching your content brother. I am an INTJ btw.
@badhabitz695 жыл бұрын
INTJ here as well
@zzj3583 жыл бұрын
I like your delivery and am encouraged to make better decisions.
@TurbopropRaven5 жыл бұрын
Good analogy to chess play. Very nice example about beast that need to be fed and eventually can ruin your business. You are rock. Very good structured.
@BGcontentproduction10 ай бұрын
Great video, have learnt a lot and will be applying the half-life thinking to my own decisions!
@joanforn74245 жыл бұрын
You changed and are changing my life, I just wanted you to know
@rafalmirek14 жыл бұрын
Thank you Sam, Love the way, you simplify processes to to prevent energy wastage. This is masterpiece, and I really going to put some serious work to it. Thanks again. Please keep doing what you doing. 🙏
@Scienceprovedinquran4 жыл бұрын
Are you interested in any online course from the best mentors like (Grant Cardone ,tai lopez , Jordan belfort , Dan Lok, Russell Brunson , Kevin David , Jason capital , Neil Patel, Billy gene, Alex Becker , Iman ghadzi , Sam ovens , Jim Kwik , Ryan Stewart , Eric Worre and so much more) . . . I am here to save you alot of money and time and effort to get the right information to grow your business. . I have more than 1000 courses for the best mentors in the world . 16TB of courses for 200$ One course will be for 30$ . And you can check every course by yourself before you buy anything. Visit : Mentorscourses101.com send email to mentorscourses101@gmail.com for proof For an extra 20% discount use code : DODO20
@maxdrvn5 жыл бұрын
I've watched this video once. It saved my life twice.
@mads14275 жыл бұрын
"If you want to achieve anything great its gonna come from doing something abnormal" - Sam Ovens (im honestly astonished that people havent figured this one out) i laughed out loud when i heard this, its true
@justinwickee Жыл бұрын
Thank you for all that you share Sam.
@anto_galvez5 жыл бұрын
How can I say it... This video gave me more value than entire paid programs... Since I know you read the comments yourself, Sam, thanks for giving so much value. Regarding a new topic for next week, it could be how to read a book to make the most of it. Keep going man and btw, happy birthday!
@madhatter27445 жыл бұрын
this video could not have better timing man, thanks a lot sam for helping us polish our minds
@SuperDrill10 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for once again expanding my mind and the way I see life and make my decisions. Your content is being a light in my life, each principle expands my mind more and the way I see life and business.
@gauravpatil33642 жыл бұрын
Completely awestruck - mindblown with your ideas Sam....a true genius😊
@sharonrizvi53102 жыл бұрын
sam ovens is one of the best youtube life advisor there is
@thaboshikwambane3 жыл бұрын
The title never really does the video justice and that's honestly the way it should always be in everything
@neilh40105 жыл бұрын
So grateful your info is superbly distilled, no fluff crap. Keeps us all motivated and focused
@kab0ky5 жыл бұрын
Hey Sam - How do you choose your books and how/when do you read them?
@channel1channelone5 жыл бұрын
MK great question! Second it :)
@Senecamarcus5 жыл бұрын
Just read Antifragile, everyone doing these videos uses ideas from Naseem Taleb. Best heuristic to choose books, is of course lindy effect and books that get shitty reviews (it gives u a hint that ideas presented in that book was something others didnt like)
@channel1channelone5 жыл бұрын
Kale Mussel thanks!
@kab0ky5 жыл бұрын
Kale Mussel is that book focused on decision making or different ideas? I searched & the author doesn’t have many books..only 3 books?
@Senecamarcus5 жыл бұрын
MK haha u dont judge an author based on number of books that author has written but rather by its content. Killer books can take decades to write. Naseem is out of this world alien man with some amazing contrarian ideas with skin in the game concept. His book is about decision making and thinking. If u want to make better decisions then its not an easy task I suggest you start with following books: 1. Antifragile 2. Thinking fast and slow 3. Seeking Wisdom Do u want to make better decisions in general or in business or dating or what? These 3 books will get you started and then you can explore more ideas like 1n3, bayes theorem, game theory, 3cases analysis, and thinking in probabilities. Thing is u better read one book and keep applying its ideas again and again for a while so it gets ingrained in your subconscious mind. Reading is useless if u dont apply it again and again to make it 2nd nature. For most beginners the fastest way to make better decisions and one which will catapult them to next level is to think what could be the worst outcome of their decision (if u cant handle the worst case then dont do it example would be marriage, worst case is divorce and u paying money to ur wife if u cant take that then dont marry or have ur gf sign prenup) so u always think worst case and then see if u can remedy all the worst case scenarios to improve ur odds of coming up on top. If u cant fix em all and u know downside is going to hurt u and u will feel bad or go thru depression coz of it then dont do it. This is fastest way to make good decisions that will make u stand out from 99.9% of the population!
@nozykey66323 жыл бұрын
OMG i've Just visited thistle it's Simply amazing
@nicoh111810 ай бұрын
This is gold, thank you so much Sam!
@obernardocouto Жыл бұрын
Sam is just incredible! Thank you for the content❤
@JohnD-bs4qi5 жыл бұрын
I figured out what I want to do, I applied your theory of not being able to stop what is that I love doing. Thank you! I have eliminated all the other stuff that I thought I should do and was not interested in at all.
@shaughnsmit20765 жыл бұрын
This is GOLD, thank you so much Sam!!
@MikeBarron14 жыл бұрын
Change your way of perception
@omaroujoud59302 жыл бұрын
i'm currently studying mental models, and the last three that you've added I've never came across, yet they're really great and logical, thanks again Sam
@NinjaKnightBatman2 жыл бұрын
every single human being should understand this video
@zerotoit5 жыл бұрын
Fantastic lesson. To view it again and again and again.
@JosephConroy5 жыл бұрын
Hey Sam, this was really great. You really did a great job on breaking it down into three segments comprised of multiple steps of consideration or actions. This really organized my mind. Now when I'm about to make any type of decision, I know how to evaluate it in such a way that the probability of me making a bad decision has been reduced significantly. This can be applied to any type of decision in any area of my life. I am definitely going to watch this two or three more times until it is solidified as a map in my mindset. Thank you.
@Iameliud4 жыл бұрын
Thank-you for the clarification... because I've been asking!
@alliesteamc35464 жыл бұрын
Great 👍 insights! Brilliant! Thanks 🙏
@SantiagoRodriguez-zi3gv5 жыл бұрын
One of your best videos so far in my opinion. You can instantly apply these concepts and notice the improvement
@МаркоКраљевић-ю5р5 жыл бұрын
SAM 2 VIDEO IDEAS : 1. advice to your younger self (teens and 20s) 2.and answer question , i want to live life like you said, but i have so many interes / hobies like hunting , martial arts, going in nature, having small parties , chess , pyaing piano , .....DO I NEED TO FORGET THEM FOREVER , OR I CAN DO THESE THINGS AFTER I SET UPP MY BUSINES AT SOME POINT , i know i should love what i do and i do. But , would i have the palce and time at some point to do these things? THanks for great videos , greating from Russia , Germany and Serbia . Also i am learning english as you can tell xD. LOve you Sam you are the father i never had even you are only 10 years older than me.
@newsdropz53615 жыл бұрын
Been waiting for this video for 10 years... Thank you so much Sam!