How do you make big career decisions when you can't know the outcome?
Should I take this job? Switch industries? Go back to school? Start a business? Career decisions often feel paralyzing because we can't see the future. How do you make good decisions under uncertainty?
Bezos framework: Imagine yourself at 80.
β’ Looking back, will you regret NOT trying?
β’ Regrets of inaction tend to hurt more than regrets of action
β’ "What if I had...?" often hurts more than "That didn't work"
Minimize future regret, not current discomfort.
From algorithms research:
β’ EXPLORE: Try new things, gather information
β’ EXPLOIT: Use what you know, optimize
β’ Early career: more exploring (find fit)
β’ Later career: more exploiting (go deep)
β’ But always some of both
When uncertain, experiment. When confident, commit.
Key question: How reversible is this decision?
β’ ONE-WAY DOORS: Hard to undo (major commitment)
β’ TWO-WAY DOORS: Easy to reverse (can try and adjust)
For two-way doors: decide fast, learn, iterate.
For one-way doors: research more, decide carefully.
Most decisions are more reversible than they seem.
Important distinction:
β’ Good decisions can have bad outcomes (bad luck)
β’ Bad decisions can have good outcomes (good luck)
β’ Judge your PROCESS, not just results
β’ Learn from decisions, regardless of outcome
You can make a good decision and still fail. That's life.
Use frameworks (regret minimization, reversibility, explore/exploit) to make good decisionsβbut accept that outcomes are never guaranteed!
Key insight: You'll never have perfect information. Use frameworks to structure your thinking, consider reversibility, minimize future regret, and remember that you can make a good decision and still have it not work outβand that's okay.
π€ Which thinking lens(es) did you use?
Select all the lenses you used:
π± A Small Everyday Story
Two job offers. Can't know which is better.
Spreadsheet: pros/cons/salary/growth. Still stuck.
Tried: "At 80, which regret hurts more?"
Answer: regretting not trying the scarier one.
Took the risk. It worked out.
(But even if it hadn'tβthe decision process was sound.)
See more guidance β
Key concepts: Regret minimization, explore vs. exploit, reversibility, decision quality vs. outcome quality, uncertainty tolerance.