23 top-level thoughts (collection)

1. Murphy's Law: The more you fear something, the more likely it will happen

Inference: The more you fear something, the more prepared you will be, so that you don't need to be afraid of anything that happens

2. Gidelin's Law: Write down the problem clearly, and you can solve half of the problem

Inference: The clearer the problem is, the more thorough the solution will be

3. Gilbert's Law: The crisis signal at work is that no one will tell you how to do your work

Inference: When someone tells you how to do something, it is not necessarily right

4. Falkland's Law: Don't make a decision when you don't need to

Inference: When it will harm your interests if you don't change, you must make a decision

5. Watson's Law: If you want to realize it, you must put information and intelligence first

Inference: In all walks of life, grasp the first-hand hot spots and combine them with corresponding products to create a strong IP

6. Sherlock Holmes Principle: Remove all impossible factors, and the rest, no matter how reluctant you are to believe it, is the truth of the fact

Inference: There is only one truth (goal)

7. Drucker's Management Thinking: Use feedback to discover strengths, use strengths to solve weaknesses, use strengths to do things, and focus on one thing at a time

Inference: Focus on developing more strengths and enhancing strengths every day

8. Buffett's Law: Invest in places with fewer competitors

Corollary: Invest in places with long-term value and few competitors

9. Giegler's Theorem: Setting high goals is equal to achieving part of the goal

Corollary: The higher the starting point, the more you get

10. Ye Du's Law: The stronger the motivation, the more efficient and successful

Corollary: Do it in advance with strong motivation

11. Law of Attraction: What you focus on, you will attract

Corollary: Focus on self-improvement, and the strong will pile up; focus on inferiority, and the weak will hurt themselves

12. The Law of Fast Fish: Speed ​​determines success or failure

Corollary: It is better to eat the slow than the big eat the small

13. Compound interest thinking: Do anything, optimize it once every time you do it, and at the same time bring an amplification effect to other things

Corollary: Optimize the things on hand as much as possible, and make it bring an amplification effect to other events, that is, you can reverse your life

14. Infinite Monkey Theorem: Let a monkey randomly press keys on a typewriter. When the key press time reaches infinity, it is almost certain to be able to type any given text, such as the complete works of Shakespeare

Inference 1: When trying under clear conditions, the direction will be clearer and you will be closer to success.