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Luke Williams Profile
Luke Williams

@LukeGWilliams

Followers
7K
Following
18
Media
111
Statuses
2K

Innovation Leader, Keynote Speaker & Bestselling Author | Professor, NYU Stern | Founder & CEO

New York City
Joined January 2010
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
3 years
Stop solving "Pain Points" and using "Best Practices" ⚠️ A few controversial things I believe about solving "Problems": 🧵👇
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
1 year
Practical ideas drive quick actions, but do we pause to consider their ripple effects? Strategic thinking requires exploring the deeper "why" before the immediate "what." Are your decisions solving one problem while creating another? 🤔 #StrategicThinking #DecisionMaking
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
1 year
Ideas and concepts are closely linked but not the same. A concept is the big picture ("food"), while an idea is a specific example ("hamburger"). Understanding the difference unlocks sharper thinking. 🧠💡 #IdeaSkills #CriticalThinking #Innovation
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
1 year
Would you follow someone who challenges everything you thought you knew? Mocked in his time, Kierkegaard is celebrated today for his bold ideas. Are we fostering innovation—or silencing it with social validation? #BreakTheEchoChamber #OriginalThinking
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
1 year
Disruptive Innovation - Luke Williams - The Entrepreneur Gene - Ep # 16 https://t.co/x0iWv1Aqin via @YouTube
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
The Social Conformity Effect: What Every Business Leader Should Know https://t.co/6eg1gIG9yE via @LinkedIn
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
The Racket Revolution: What Tennis Teaches Us About Disruption https://t.co/tPiqFqNHsl via @LinkedIn
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Mastering the Socratic Method is a transformative journey in critical thinking. Follow me for more techniques on elevating your intellectual rigor and decision-making skills. [10/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 8: After Zooming In, Zoom Out Revisit your original thinking and reflect on the entire process to draw broader conclusions. Was your initial thinking correct? What errors can you identify in your thought process? How can you apply these insights moving forward? [9/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 7: Evaluate Potential Alternatives Broaden your perspective by considering alternative viewpoints to understand the problem fully. What alternative viewpoints might exist? Why might these be superior to your original thinking? Why do others believe these to be true? [8/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 6: Understand the Consequences of Being Wrong Consider the implications of your thinking. Understand the stakes. What are the potential consequences of being wrong? Can mistakes be quickly corrected? What is the risk-reward ratio here? [7/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 5: Evaluate the Evidence Examine the evidence backing your thinking. Assess credibility and look for hidden evidence. What concrete evidence supports your hypothesis? Is it based on reliable sources? Could there be hidden evidence that contradicts your hypothesis? [6/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 4: Challenge Underlying Assumptions Expose and scrutinize the assumptions underpinning your original thinking. Ruthless honesty is key. Why do you believe this assumption to be true? How do you know it’s true? How would you know if you were wrong? [5/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 3: Probe with Progressive Questioning Delve deeper into your initial thoughts with targeted questions to test the robustness of your arguments. Why do you believe this hypothesis? Is your thinking too vague? What is the rationale behind your assumptions? [4/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 2: Propose Ideas Based on these Questions Articulate the problem and propose your initial thoughts or hypotheses. This step sets a baseline. What is your initial hypothesis? What are the origins of your current thinking? How did you arrive at this conclusion? [3/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
Step 1: Start with Open-Ended Questions Identify the problem you aim to solve. Open-ended questions are your catalyst, encouraging expansive thinking and avoiding simple yes/no answers. What is the problem at hand? Why is this an issue? Who is affected by this problem? [2/10]
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@LukeGWilliams
Luke Williams
2 years
How to Master the Socratic Method – A Step-by-Step Guide Want to elevate your critical thinking and decision-making skills? Here's a structured approach that challenges assumptions and promotes intellectual rigor. 🧵
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