Stop borrowing other people's answers. Learn to reason a hard decision down to what actually has to be true, then rebuild a call you can defend.
Most strategy is inherited: a competitor's playbook, a consultant's template, last year's plan with new dates. When the map runs out, those borrowed answers leave you stuck.
First-principles thinking is the skill of reasoning a problem down to the few things that must be true, then building the answer back up from there. Most people never do it because decomposing a messy decision is uncomfortable and slow, so they reach for the nearest analogy instead. This course makes the process concrete and repeatable.
You work through real strategic calls: finding the load-bearing assumption a plan rests on, sizing a market without waiting for an analyst report, pricing from the customer's actual decision rather than a cost-plus formula, and committing to a move when there is no precedent to copy. You also learn the discipline of knowing when the conventional answer is genuinely the right one, so you reason from scratch only where it pays off.
Founders: face decisions with no template and need to defend a call to investors and their own team.
Operators and managers: want to question the inherited plan instead of executing it on autopilot.
Consultants and analysts: need to build a market size or pricing case from the ground up when the report does not exist yet.
8 lessons to get you from zero to confident. Start at your own pace.