判断力是决定性技能

Naval Ravikant 2019-04-29

判断力是决定性技能

在近乎无限杠杆的时代,判断力是最重要的技能


尼维:
我们谈到了特定知识,谈到了责任感,谈到了杠杆。纳瓦尔在他的推文中谈到的最后一项技能是判断力,他说”杠杆是你判断力的力量倍增器。”

纳瓦尔:
我们现在生活在一个近乎无限杠杆的时代,所有巨大的财富都是通过杠杆创造的。你的首要工作是去获得杠杆,你可以通过许可获得杠杆,让人们为你工作,或者筹集资金。

或者你可以无需许可地获得杠杆,通过学习编程或成为优秀的沟通者,进行播客、广播、创建视频、写作等。

这就是你获得杠杆的方式,但一旦你有了杠杆,你要用它做什么?嗯,你职业生涯的第一部分都在努力获取杠杆。一旦你有了杠杆,你就想放慢一点,因为你的判断力真的很重要。

这就像你从驾驶帆船变成了驾驶远洋班轮或油轮。你面临的风险更大,但你获得的收益也更多。你承载的负荷要大得多。在无限杠杆的时代,判断力成为最重要的技能。

沃伦·巴菲特现在如此富有是因为他的判断力。即使你明天拿走沃伦所有的钱,投资者也会从四面八方涌来,交给他1000亿美元,因为他们知道他的判断力非常好,他们会给他这1000亿美元中的很大一部分来投资。

你所做的一切都是为了应用判断力

最终,你所做的一切实际上都是在为你应用判断力做准备。人们经常抱怨的一件事是CEO的薪酬。当然,存在着裙带资本主义,这些CEO控制着他们的董事会,董事会给他们太多钱。

但是,有些CEO确实值得他们的薪酬,因为他们的判断力更好。如果你在驾驶一艘大船,如果你在驾驶谷歌或苹果,你的判断力比下一个人好10%或20%,社会实际上会多付给你数亿美元,因为你正在驾驶一艘价值1000亿美元的船。

如果你比另一个人多10%或20%的时间在正确航向上,那么你管理的数千亿美元上的复合结果将如此巨大,相比之下你的CEO薪酬将相形见绌。

经过验证的判断力,围绕判断力的可信度,是如此关键。沃伦·巴菲特在这方面获胜是因为他有巨大的可信度。他高度负责。他在公共领域一次又一次地正确。他建立了极高诚信的声誉,所以你可以信任他。

像这样的人,人们会因为他的判断力而给他无限的杠杆。没有人问他工作有多努力;没有人问他什么时候起床或什么时候睡觉。他们就像说:“沃伦,做你的事吧。”

判断力,特别是经过验证的判断力,具有高度责任感、清晰的记录,是至关重要的。

判断力是知道你的行动的长期后果

尼维:
让我们定义判断力。我会将其定义为知道你的决策的长期影响,或者能够预测你的决策的长期影响。

纳瓦尔:
有趣的是。我对智慧的定义是知道你的行动的长期后果,所以它们并没有那么不同。智慧只是个人领域中的判断力。

应用于外部问题的智慧我认为是判断力。它们高度相关。但是,是的,它是知道你的行动的长期后果,然后做出正确的决策来利用这一点。

没有经验,判断力往往毫无用处

判断力很难建立。这是智力和经验都发挥作用的地方。

象牙塔中所谓的知识分子存在许多问题,但纳西姆·塔勒布反对他们的原因之一是因为他们没有切身利益。他们没有现实世界的经验,所以他们只应用纯粹的智力。

没有任何经验的智力往往比无用更糟,因为你获得了智力给你的信心,你获得了一些可信度,但因为你没有切身利益,没有实际经验,没有真正的责任感,你只是在扔飞镖。

现实世界总是远比我们能够理性化的复杂得多。特别是所有有趣的、快速发展的前沿领域和问题,没有经验你无法到达那里。如果你聪明且迭代快,甚至不是你在一件事上投入10,000小时,而是你在某件事上尝试10,000次。

判断力最好的人往往是最不情绪化的

如果你聪明且有很多快速迭代,并且你试图不让情绪介入,判断力最好的人实际上是最不情绪化的。许多最好的投资者在这方面被认为几乎是机器人般的,但我不会惊讶即使是最好的企业家也经常显得不情绪化。

有一种激情企业家的原型,是的,他们必须关心他们在做什么,但他们也必须非常清楚地看到实际发生的事情。阻止你看到实际发生的事情的是你的情绪。我们的情绪不断模糊我们的判断力,在投资、经营公司、构建产品或成为企业家时,情绪真的会碍事。

情绪是阻止你看到实际发生的事情的东西,直到你无法再抵抗正在发生的真相,直到它变得太突然,然后你被迫陷入痛苦;这某种程度上是你构建的幻想的破灭。

尼维:
为了尝试连接其中一些概念,我会说,首先,你要为你的判断力负责。判断力是智慧的运用。智慧来自经验;而这种经验可以通过短期迭代加速。

许多顶级投资者经常听起来像哲学家

纳瓦尔:
许多顶级投资者,许多价值投资者,比如如果你读杰里米·格兰瑟姆,或者你读沃伦·巴菲特,或者你研究迈克尔·伯里,这些人听起来像哲学家,或者他们是哲学家,或者他们读很多历史书或科学书。

就像他们在做什么,他们不应该读投资书吗?不。投资书是学习投资最糟糕的地方,因为投资是一项现实世界的活动,是高度多变量的,所有优势总是被竞争掉。它总是在前沿。

你实际需要的只是非常、非常广泛的判断力和思维。最好的方法是学习一切,包括很多哲学。哲学也让你更加坚忍,让你不那么情绪化,因此你做出更好的决策;你有更好的判断力。

某人越愤怒,他们的判断力就越差

一件简单的事情是我看到……我上推特,似乎一半的推特总是对某事感到愤怒。你可以在某人的推特动态中窥见他们头脑中一直是什么样子。

我向你保证,某人越愤怒,他们的判断力就越差。如果有人不断发推文表达政治愤怒,就像一个愤怒的人不断争吵,你不想把车钥匙交给这个人,更不用说把你公司的钥匙交给他们了。


Judgment Is the Decisive Skill

In an age of nearly infinite leverage, judgment is the most important skill


Nivi:
We spoke about specific knowledge, we talked about accountability, we talked about leverage. The last skill that Naval talks about in his tweetstorm is judgment, where he says, that “Leverage is a force multiplier for your judgment.”

Naval:
We are now living in an age of nearly infinite leverage, and all the great fortunes are created through leverage. Your first job is to go and obtain leverage, and you can obtain leverage through permission by getting people to work for you, or by raising capital.

Or you can get leverage permissionlessly by learning how to code or becoming good communicator and podcasting, broadcasting, creating videos, writing, etc.

That’s how you get leverage, but once you have leverage, what do you do with it? Well, the first part of your career’s spent hustling to get leverage. Once you have the leverage, then you wanna slow down a bit, because your judgment really matters.

It’s like you’ve gone from steering your sailboat around to now you’re steering an ocean liner or a tanker. You have a lot more at risk, but you have a lot more to gain as well. You’re carrying a much higher payload. In an age of infinite leverage, judgment becomes the most important skill.

Warren Buffett is so wealthy now because of his judgment. Even if you were to take away all of Warren’s money, tomorrow, investors would come out of the woodwork and hand him a 100billionbecausetheyknowhisjudgmentissogood,andtheywouldgivehimabigchunkofthat100 billion because they know his judgment is so good, and they would give him a big chunk of that 100 billion to invest.

Everything else you do is setting you up to apply judgment

Ultimately, everything else that you do is actually setting you up to apply your judgment. One of the big things that people rail on is CEO pay. For sure there’s crony capitalism that goes on where these CEOs control their boards and the boards give them too much money.

But, there are certain CEOs who definitely earned their keep because their judgment is better. If you’re steering a big ship, if you’re steering Google or Apple, and your judgment is 10 or 20 percent better than the next person’s, society will literally pay you hundreds of millions of dollars more, because you’re steering a $100 billion ship.

If you’re on course 10 or 20 percent of the time more often than the other person, the compounding results on that hundreds of billions of dollars you’re managing will be so large that your CEO pay will be dwarfed in comparison.

Demonstrated judgment, credibility around the judgment, is so critical. Warren Buffett wins here because he has massive credibility. He’s been highly accountable. He’s been right over and over in the public domain. He’s built a reputation for very high integrity, so you can trust him.

A person like that, people will throw infinite leverage behind him because of his judgment. Nobody asks him how hard he works; nobody asks him when he wakes up or when he goes to sleep. They’re like, “Warren, just do your thing.”

Judgment, especially demonstrated judgment, with high accountability, clear track record, is critical.

Judgment is knowing the long-term consequences of your actions

Nivi:
Let’s define judgment. I would define it as knowing the long-term effects of your decisions, or being able to predict the long-term effects of your decisions.

Naval:
It’s funny. My definition of wisdom is knowing the long term consequences of your actions, so they’re not all that different. Wisdom is just judgment on a personal domain.

Wisdom applied to external problems I think is judgment. They’re highly linked. But, yes, it’s knowing the long term consequences of your actions and then making the right decision to capitalize on that.

Without experience, judgment is often less than useless

Judgment is very hard to build up. This is where both intellect and experience come in play.

There are many problems with the so-called intellectuals in the ivory tower, but one of the reasons why Nassim Taleb rails against them is because they have no skin in the game. They have no real-world experience, so they just apply purely intellect.

Intellect without any experience is often worse than useless because you get the confidence that the intellect gives you, and you get some of the credibility, but because you had no skin in the game, and you had no real experience, and no real accountability, you’re just throwing darts.

The real world is always far, far more complex than we can intellectualize. Especially all the interesting, fast-moving edge domains and problems, you can’t get there without experience. If you are smart and you iterate fast, it’s not even you put 10,000 hours into something, but you take 10,000 tries at something.

The people with the best judgment are among the least emotional

If you are smart and you have a lot of quick iterations, and you try to keep your emotions out of it, the people with the best judgment are actually among the least emotional. A lot of the best investors are considered almost robotic in that regard, but I wouldn’t be surprised if even the best entrepreneurs often come across as unemotional.

There is sort of this archetype of the passionate entrepreneur, and yeah, they have to care about what they’re doing, but they also have to see very clearly what’s actually happening. The thing that prevents you from seeing what’s actually happening are your emotions. Our emotions are constantly clouding our judgment, and in investing, or in running companies, or in building products, or being an entrepreneur, emotions really get in the way.

Emotions are what prevent you from seeing what’s actually happening, until you can no longer resist the truth of what’s happening, until it becomes too sudden, and then you’re forced into suffering; which is sort of a breaking of this fantasy that you had put together.

Nivi:
To try and connect some of these concepts, I would say that, first, you’re accountable for your judgment. Judgment is the exercise of wisdom. Wisdom comes from experience; and that experience can be accelerated through short iterations.

A lot of the top investors often sound like philosophers

Naval:
And the reason why a lot of the top investors, a lot of the value investors, like if you read Jeremy Grantham, or you read Warren Buffet, or you read up on Michael Burry, these people sound like philosophers, or they are philosophers, or they’re reading a lot of history books or science books.

Like what are they doing, shouldn’t they be reading investment books. No. Investment books are the worst place to learn about investment, because investment is a real-world activity that is highly multi-variate, all the advantages are always being competed away. It’s always on the cutting-edge.

What you actually just need is very, very broad-based judgment and thinking. The best way to do that is to study everything, including a lot of philosophy. Philosophy also makes you more stoic, makes you less emotional, and so you make better decisions; you have better judgment.

The more outraged someone is, the worse their judgment

One simple thing is I see … I go out on Twitter and it seems like half of Twitter is outraged at something at all times. You can go within someone’s Twitter feed and get at least some semblance of what it must be like to be in their head all the time.

The more outraged somebody is, I guarantee you, the worse their judgment is. If someone’s constantly tweeting political outrage, and just see like an angry person getting into fights, you don’t want to hand this person the keys to your car, let alone the keys to your company.