swyxio / swyxdotio

This is the repo for swyx's blog - Blog content is created in github issues, then posted on swyx.io as blog pages! Comment/watch to follow along my blog within GitHub
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80/20 is the new Half-Ass #287

Closed swyxio closed 2 years ago

swyxio commented 2 years ago

source: devto devToUrl: "https://dev.to/swyx/80-20-is-the-new-half-ass-3kg" devToReactions: 20 devToReadingTime: 3 devToPublishedAt: "2021-04-28T19:00:42.842Z" devToViewsCount: 643 title: 80/20 is the new Half-Ass published: true description: Don't spend your life spraying 20% effort all over the place, hoping for 80% results, only to look back and wonder why you never hit 100% on anything. tags: Reflections, Advice slug: 8020 canonical_url: https://www.swyx.io/8020 cover_image: https://media.tenor.com/images/57667e0083dca419064604482f597126/tenor.png disclosure: This is just a quick rant. I'm mainly trying to remind people of the value of execution and the small details, not dunking on anyone in particular.

The Pareto Principle is making you lazy.

Let me be more precise: The Pareto distribution is a useful model of power law effects in real life. But people are using it poorly, primarily as an excuse to be lazy.

This thought was triggered by Shaan Puri's newsletter featuring Steph Smith this week (both of whom I greatly respect, this is a jumping off point, not a dunk):

{% twitter 1386071726279127041 %}

You hear 80/20 rules a lot in premium mediocre circles. If you want to signal that you are smarter than the average 80/20 bear, you might refer to the "high order bit" instead. Same shit, different status signal.

The spirit of the idea is sound. It's great for 280 character tweets and 5 minute soundbites. But idk if it's good for people who finish things. At best, I don't think it's sufficient for execution. At worst, it's just intellectually dishonest.

Look at reactions like this:

"Love this [80/20] framing! Great way to remove the fluff and get to the core".

I'm sorry but the remaining 80% is not "the fluff":

I'm reminded of that classic movie Click, where Adam Sandler finds a magic remote that lets him "80/20 his life":

{% youtube 5fjha1FnlBU %}

Don't spend your life spraying 20% effort all over the place, hoping for 80% results, only to look back and wonder why you never hit 100% on anything.

Edit: The always excellent David Golden wrote a wonderful response to this piece highlighting the cases where 80/20 is actually very justified, and I agree!

This topic is loosely related to Epistemology, which I've written about briefly.