The Gardening Mindset
Overview
A shift from the "Builder" mindset (rigid plans, top-down control) to a "Gardener" mindset (creating conditions for growth, ecosystem curation). Plant many cheap "seeds" and invest in the ones that show organic traction.
Core principle: Don't try to predict the winner. Look for signals of natural growth.
Builder vs Gardener
code
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ BUILDER MINDSET │ GARDENER MINDSET │ ├───────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤ │ Fixed Plan & Execution │ Emergence & Adaptation │ │ Top-Down Control │ Ecosystem Curation │ │ Efficiency Focused │ Resilience Focused │ │ Failure = Waste │ Failure = Cheap Learning │ │ Industrial/Factory Farming │ Community Gardening │ └───────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘
The 70/30 Rule
| Allocation | Purpose |
|---|---|
| 70% | Legible, "boring" value (buy cover, build trust) |
| 30% | Plant "acorns" with compounding potential |
Key Principles
- •Don't predict winners: Look for signals of natural growth
- •Cheap seeds: Hours, not months of investment
- •Protect seedlings: Shield experiments from "squirrels" (org immune system)
- •Invest in traction: When something grows, pour resources into it
Common Mistakes
- •Expecting immediate ROI on every seed
- •Forcing growth: Trying to make a specific seed succeed
- •No cover fire: Failing to provide legible value to buy space for experiments
Real-World Example
Building an open-source tool: if a developer uses it, invest more. If not, the cost was low (hours, not months). Done properly, it looks like magic—emergent success rather than forced outcomes.
Source: Alex Komoroske (Google, Stripe) via Lenny's Podcast