Strong Opinions, Weakly Held

https://medium.com/@ameet/strong-opinions-weakly-held-a-framework-for-thinking-6530d417e364

This is Saffo’s process for “Strong Opinions, Weakly Held.” “Allow your intuition to guide you to a conclusion, no matter how imperfect — this is the ‘strong opinion’ part. Then –and this is the ‘weakly held’ part– prove yourself wrong. Engage in creative doubt. Look for information that doesn’t fit, or indicators that pointing in an entirely different direction. Eventually your intuition will kick in and a new hypothesis will emerge out of the rubble, ready to be ruthlessly torn apart once again. You will be surprised by how quickly the sequence of faulty forecasts will deliver you to a useful result.”

You need conviction in your approach (since otherwise you’ll never actually do anything). But you need to be open minded when given conflicting information (especially important to be open to this when it’s coming from more junior staff) https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/kids-vs-adults