June 15: 1% a day😍
Let me tell you a story. So it’s a story about a strategy and approach philosophy… one that I’ve been thinking a lot about. And it starts with a guy, that maybe you haven’t heard of. His name is Dave Brailsford.
And so they hired this guy named Dave Brailsford to change that. And in fact at the time, they were so mediocre that when they went to buy a new set of bikes, they’re getting like 200 from a top manufacturer in Europe, they actually weren’t even given quotes from the manufacturer because they didn’t want other teams to see the British riders using their gear, for fear that it would hurt sales.
And so they brought Brailsford in, and they said: “What’s your plan for changing this?”
The way that he described it is the 1% improvement in nearly everything that you do.
So they started with a bunch of things you would expect the cycling team to start with. So for example, they put slightly lighter tires on the bike. They got a more ergonomic seat for the riders to sit on. They had their outdoor riders wear indoor racing suits because they were lighter and more aerodynamic.
They had each rider wear a biofeedback sensor so they could see how they would respond to training and then adjust it appropriately for the person.
They also figured out the type of pillow that led to the best night’s sleep for each rider and then brought that on the road with them to hotels when they were competing.
And Brailsford said if we can actually do this right, if we can execute all these little 1% improvements, then I think we can win a Tour de France within 5 years.
He ended up being wrong. They won in two years and then they repeated again the third year with a different rider. And then after one year break they won two more; so they’ve won four out of last five now, have gone to British cyclists.
And one way to think about it is just kind of basic math, like if you just look at the numbers. If you were able to improve by 1% each day for an entire year and those gains compound, you would end up 37 times better at the end of the year.
And if you were to get 1% worse, you would little yourself almost all the way down to zero.
And habits are the compound interest of self-improvement.
And so if you can learn to master those, then you can make time work for you rather than get against you, right?
Good habits make time your ally. Bad habits make time your enemy.
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