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| I've been obsessing over this question lately: | Why do some people consistently stumble into big opportunities while others miss them completely? | After talking with dozens of successful founders, I've noticed a pattern: they're not necessarily smarter or more connected. They just make more small bets. | Last year, I made 14 tiny experiments: | Launched 3 micro-SaaS tools Created 5 different content formats Tested 4 different automation workflows Explored 2 emerging AI platforms
| Most failed. A few were mediocre. One exploded. | That single winner is now generating more revenue than my previous five years of careful planning combined. | Here's what I've learned: success in the AI age isn't about making perfect decisions. It's about increasing your surface area for luck. | The math is simple: | Small bets = More at-bats More at-bats = Higher chance of hitting a home run Small failures = Fast learning, minimal damage
| One founder I know has a "Failure Friday" ritual. Every week, he launches something tiny that might fail. A new landing page. A different pricing model. An experimental feature. | Most weeks, nothing happens. But every few months, one of these small bets returns 100x. | This approach works especially well with AI tools because the cost of experimentation has collapsed. What used to take weeks now takes hours. | The secret isn't having better ideas—it's testing more ideas. | Find out why 1M+ professionals read Superhuman AI daily. | | In 2 years you will be working for AI | Or an AI will be working for you | Here's how you can future-proof yourself: | Join the Superhuman AI newsletter – read by 1M+ people at top companies Master AI tools, tutorials, and news in just 3 minutes a day Become 10X more productive using AI
| Join 1,000,000+ pros at companies like Google, Meta, and Amazon that are using AI to get ahead. | Sign up and start learning AI | So my challenge to you: What small bet could you make this week? Something quick, low-risk, but with potential upside? | Don't overthink it. Just ship it. | Remember: You don't need to be right most of the time. You just need to be right once. | What tiny experiment will you run this week? |
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