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I've been thinking about something Charlie Munger said that totally changed how I look at problems. Most people are obsessed with studying success, right? But Munger flipped the script - he says to really understand how to build a great company, you need to first study why companies fail. That's the core of what they call reverse thinking.
Here's the thing: reverse thinking is basically looking at everything from the opposite angle. Instead of asking 'how do I win,' you ask 'how do I lose.' Sounds counterintuitive, but it works because sometimes positive thinking just doesn't cut it. Jack Ma actually said something similar - he said he doesn't really know how to define success, but he knows exactly how to define failure. And failure is just giving up.
Wu Xiaobo wrote an entire book called 'The Great Defeat' specifically studying why companies collapse. That's reverse thinking in action. There's this concept called pre-mortem analysis too - basically you imagine your plan already failed, and you work backwards to figure out what went wrong. It's like The Art of War but inverted. Sun Tzu wasn't just thinking about how to win battles; he was thinking about failure first as the baseline.
What I find most useful is Duan Yongping's approach - the guy who built Subor, BBK, OPPO, and Vivo. He talked about his 'not on the list' framework, which is basically his reverse thinking filter. Don't expand into things outside your competence. Don't make 20 major decisions a year - that's just chaos. Don't bet on things you don't understand. And here's the one that stuck with me: don't believe in shortcuts or overtaking on curves. That last one is brutal but true.
The beauty of reverse thinking is that it's like having a mental filter. With it, you can say no to 90% of opportunities within 10 seconds. That's powerful. Instead of chasing every shiny thing, you're protected by knowing what not to do. And honestly, in business and investing, knowing what to avoid is sometimes more valuable than knowing what to pursue. That's the real edge of reverse thinking.