How To Do Great Work
How To Do Great Work
How To Do Great Work
July 2023
The first step is to decide what to work on. The work you
choose needs to have three qualities: it has to be
something you have a natural aptitude for, that you have a
deep interest in, and that offers scope to do great work.
Steps two and four will require hard work. It may not be
possible to prove that you have to work hard to do great
things, but the empirical evidence is on the scale of the
evidence for mortality. That's why it's essential to work on
something you're deeply interested in. Interest will drive
you to work harder than mere diligence ever could.
One sign that you're suited for some kind of work is when
you like even the parts that other people find tedious or
frightening.
But fields aren't people; you don't owe them any loyalty. If
in the course of working on one thing you discover
another that's more exciting, don't be afraid to switch.
There are a lot of forces that will lead you astray when
you're trying to figure out what to work on.
Pretentiousness, fashion, fear, money, politics, other
people's wishes, eminent frauds. But if you stick to what
you find genuinely interesting, you'll be proof against all
of them. If you're interested, you're not astray.
Following your interests may sound like a rather passive
strategy, but in practice it usually means following them
past all sorts of obstacles. You usually have to risk
rejection and failure. So it does take a good deal of
boldness.
You don't just put out your sail and get blown forward by
inspiration. There are headwinds and currents and hidden
shoals. So there's a technique to working, just as there is
to sailing.
Since there are two senses of starting work — per day and
per project — there are also two forms of procrastination.
Per-project procrastination is far the more dangerous. You
put off starting that ambitious project from year to year
because the time isn't quite right. When you're
procrastinating in units of years, you can get a lot not
done. [8]
Great work is consistent not only with who did it, but with
itself. It's usually all of a piece. So if you face a decision in
the middle of working on something, ask which choice is
more consistent.
You may have to throw things away and redo them. You
won't necessarily have to, but you have to be willing to.
And that can take some effort; when there's something
you need to redo, status quo bias and laziness will
combine to keep you in denial about it. To beat this ask: If
I'd already made the change, would I want to revert to
what I have now?
Whereas some of the very best work will seem like it took
comparatively little effort, because it was in a sense
already there. It didn't have to be built, just seen. It's a
very good sign when it's hard to say whether you're
creating something or discovering it.
Don't try to cram too much new stuff into any one version.
There are names for doing this with the first version
(taking too long to ship) and the second (the second
system effect), but these are both merely instances of a
more general principle.
But what you don't know is only half the problem with
inexperience. The other half is what you do know that
ain't so. You arrive at adulthood with your head full of
nonsense — bad habits you've acquired and false things
you've been taught — and you won't be able to do great
work till you clear away at least the nonsense in the way of
whatever type of work you want to do.
It may take some effort to find the people who are really
good, though. Doing great work has such prestige that in
some places, particularly universities, there's a polite
fiction that everyone is engaged in it. And that is far from
true. People within universities can't say so openly, but
the quality of the work being done in different
departments varies immensely. Some departments have
people doing great work; others have in the past; others
never have.
The people you spend time with will also have a big effect
on your morale. You'll find there are some who increase
your energy and others who decrease it, and the effect
someone has is not always what you'd expect. Seek out
the people who increase your energy and avoid those
who decrease it. Though of course if there's someone you
need to take care of, that takes precedence.
Notice how often that word has come up. If you asked an
oracle the secret to doing great work and the oracle
replied with a single word, my bet would be on
"curiosity."
Notes
[9] You can't usually get paid for doing exactly what you
want, especially early on. There are two options: get paid
for doing work close to what you want and hope to push
it closer, or get paid for doing something else entirely and
do your own projects on the side. Both can work, but
both have drawbacks: in the first approach your work is
compromised by default, and in the second you have to
fight to get time to do it.
[10] If you set your life up right, it will deliver the focus-
relax cycle automatically. The perfect setup is an office
you work in and that you walk to and from.
[17] For example you might give the nth most important
topic (m-1)/m^n of your attention, for some m > 1. You
couldn't allocate your attention so precisely, of course,
but this at least gives an idea of a reasonable distribution.
[27] This is false when the work the other people have to
do is very constrained, as with SETI@home or Bitcoin. It
may be possible to expand the area in which it's false by
defining similarly restricted protocols with more freedom
of action in the nodes.
[28] Corollary: Building something that enables people to
go around intermediaries and engage directly with their
audience is probably a good idea.