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Leverage, Mastery, and the One Decision That Changes Everything

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By Goksi Ozturkeri

Leverage, Mastery, and the One Decision That Changes Everything

🕒 read time: 3 minutes

Welcome to The Pressure Zone, a weekly newsletter with tools and mental models for those who play life on hard mode.

Today’s Zone Brief

This week, we’re talking about a $100K decision that almost cost us $2.3M and what I learned from a polymath mentor about moving fast and thinking deep.

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Words I Keep Coming Back To

“If you want to do something big, identify the highest leverage point and put all your energy there.”

Paraphrased from Naval Ravikant

Not long ago, we were faced with a decision at work. Spend an unexpected $100,000 to keep a solar project on track, or stay within budget and accept a 9–12 month delay.

Instinct kicked in. No one likes to overpay, especially when it’s unexpected. Some felt we could absorb the delay; after all, we had other projects in the pipeline.

But the real cost wasn’t in the price tag. It was hidden in the ripple effects.

We sat down and ran the numbers.

  1. Lost revenue: A delayed project means no electricity sold, no revenue earned. One year of delay would cost us ~$1.5 million.

  2. Commitment fees: We pay our lenders regardless of whether we draw their capital. In infrastructure, this is standard. In this case, it meant ~$500,000 burned for doing nothing.

  3. Equity drag: The longer our investors' money sits idle, the more expensive it becomes, through accrued interest, lost IRR, or dilution. Add another ~$370,000.

We could’ve kept going, but the picture was clear:

In an effort to save $100,000, we were about to lose over $2.3 million.

That’s the thing about leverage. It’s easy to spot in hindsight, but it hides in plain sight today.

We didn’t need to do everything right.

We just needed to identify the one move that made everything else easier, or irrelevant.

Framework: The Deep Dive Method

Last week, I met with a longtime mentor visiting New York. By training, he is an engineer, economist, and lawyer, but his body of work spans everything from AI regulation and digital currencies to automation, cybersecurity, and geoeconomics.

A true polymath in the era of TikTok dance trends.

Throughout the years, I’ve seen him moderate panels, deliver talks, and hold his own with world-class experts across disciplines. But what continues to impress me is not the depth of his Ivy League resume, but his ability to master new topics at lightning speed, then speak on them with authority.

This time, he was in town to moderate a panel on deep-sea mining, a topic he’d only recently begun exploring.

When I asked him his secret, he said:

“I immerse myself in the topic. For weeks, sometimes months. I read everything worth reading, watch everything worth watching, and let curiosity do the rest.”

Sounds simple, right? But most of us wouldn’t do it.

We hoard tabs, bounce between articles, skim content, and hope it turns into understanding.

And I’m guilty of all of it.

But as someone who prides himself on learning fast, I found myself asking:

What really separates elite learners from the rest?

Here is my take—the framework I’m building into my own process:

  1. Set the stakes: Learn like you are preparing to brief a head of state next week. Learning with a tight timeline forces focus.

  2. Focus on the fundamentals: Don’t chase the headlines. What are the 3–5 core forces that drive this topic? Anchor there. Without first principles, you are learning trivia.

  3. Curate, don’t binge: Seek out the highest signal sources. A great book, a critical podcast, a sharp skeptic. Experts don’t consume more; they consume better.

  4. Talk it out early: Summarize it to a friend or colleague. Draw a diagram of it. If you can’t explain it simply, go back to step 2.

  5. Ship it: Teach it. Write about it. Moderate the panel. Public thinking keeps you at the edge of your knowledge.

What’s your go-to move when you need to learn fast and go deep? Share below—I’m always on the lookout for new frameworks!

The Pressure Test

What’s the domino that knocks down the next hundred?

Look at your to-do list for this week. If it’s anything like mine, it grows faster than it shrinks.

Now ask yourself: What is one thing on that list that, if completed, makes the rest easier or irrelevant?

Start there.

That’s your $2.3 million decision.

p.s. If you found today’s brief useful, forward this to someone who's juggling too many low-leverage tasks this week.

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