Why the ‘egg hunt’ beats the ‘gold rush’
A gold rush is about urgency, scarcity and the risk of total failure. An egg hunt is about adventure, discovery and the thrill of the find. In an organization, the ‘eggs’ aren’t hidden in some far-off mountain; they are already tucked away in your operating procedures, technical limitations and daily decision-making.
By shifting to an egg hunt framework, we balance the frenzy of the AI era with disciplined discovery. We stop looking for one massive, mythical nugget of gold and start collecting dozens of high-value, low-risk eggs that, when gathered, drive massive cumulative value.
As a child, I had an approach to an egg hunt. I would run through the yard as fast as possible, looking for eggs easy to find and placing them into my basket. As I found each egg, I would turn to my parents, sharing a moment of excitement before continuing the race for the next egg. Once I found all the easy-to-find eggs, I followed with a second pass seeking more difficult-to-find eggs. I would quickly expand my ability to discover as I learned new approaches my parents had for hiding the eggs behind a bush, on a tree limb or in a downspout. After confirming all the eggs are found, we would return inside to open the eggs.
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