Learn Clustering Method 101 in 5 minutes

In real life we might come across the problem when we want to group our data and learn the basic structure. For example, finding the subgroup of our users can help us come up with more specific…

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How to Solve Problems Successfully Using the Power of Inversion

It’s the art of doing the opposite

When you outscore your opponent in football, you win. In the quest to win English football's biggest prize, managers have chased the glory of goals to succeed. Teams have gone all out to keep hitting the back of the net. It drives the game forward, as managers seek to adopt smarter ways to create and score goals.

Newcastle came second that season.

There is always another team who will outplay you and outscore you. What could Newcastle have done differently? Conventional wisdom tells us to win, teams must score more than the opponent.

But what if you did the opposite?

What, instead of asking how to win, you asked how not to lose?

In football, the answer is to not concede goals. If you can stop your opponent from scoring, they can’t win. It doesn’t guarantee you winning, but it does guarantee you won’t lose.

This concept is how inversion works.

“We’ve always done it like this.”

What follows is an ethos of repeating patterns.

We do what we’ve done before. Processes stay rigidly firm as our brains fail to lead us past the structures we’ve previously created. “We’ve always done it like this” is a quote that supports the limitations of our creative thinking.

It stops us from solving problems, it stops businesses from improving and it stops football teams from winning championships.

We even have a name for it, conventional wisdom.

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