How to increase your surface area for luck

usefulfictions.substack.com

202 points by jger15 2 days ago


tibbar - 2 days ago

The luckiest thing I ever did was probably burning out, quitting my small-town engineering job, and then, after a few months, getting in at an AI-related SF startup before AI really took off, during that bubble when it was a little easier to get hired in general. That generated such an enormous volume of opportunity, growth, and well-connected friends that it makes my head spin.

Put another way: I had very few opportunities previously, and they weren't too good. I also didn't really have good ideas on how to get ahead. Now, it almost doesn't really matter what I do - every direction is incredible.

I'm not quite sure how to boil down this situation, but I'm not sure that it matches up to the article. My luck surface area is certainly larger now, but it mostly stems from one very well-timed decision, not from intentionally going out to make connections (I still struggle with that.)

markus_zhang - 2 days ago

My opinion is success is difficult to copy and luck plays a huge part.

A better way is to observe the people who failed and failed miserably, and learn from their failures. My model of the world is that, for ordinary people, you are going to be exposed to some opportunities to succeed from time to time, but in a random fashion. You only need to catch one or two to be successful. So the key is NOT to maximize your success rate, but to make sure you never fell into a hole you cannot climb back, and prepare for the next opportunity.

But so far I have not seen any serious conference that focuses on failures. Everyone wants to learn from the winners. I’d hold a losers conference if I got the time.

swyx - 2 days ago

her suggestions

- Operate from a place of genuine curiosity

- Assume you’re always auditioning for a bigger role

- Give before you take

- Air your weirdness

- Host events

- A period of lostness is a part of it

i think some novel points (host events is good, i agree) but also the rest of this is fuzzy and unorganized. you can spend a lot of effort accumulating microlucks but not get anywhere and burn out completely and early.

my version: https://swyx.io/create-luck

basically classic advice is do more x talk more about what you do = surface area

can improve that by pursuing authentic curiosity as TFA suggests

but then i add in an element of strategic thinking - go to where luck is more likely to occur.

smokel - 2 days ago

This is related to the exploration–exploitation tradeoff studied in reinforcement learning [1], for which no universally optimal solution is known. This article suggests to explore more, but it might be wise to exploit your knowledge and be somewhat risk-averse every now and then as well.

Also, there is a difference between making decisions at the individual level and looking at the actions of all humans combined. A strategy that is sub-optimal for most individuals can still yield positive outcomes at the societal level. For example, it is fortunate that many people go into research, even though it is highly unlikely for an individual to find a massive breakthrough.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploration%E2%80%93exploitati...

adamgordonbell - 2 days ago

“Air your weirdness” is great advice. It’s framed here as “start a blog,” which can feel trite, but the larger point is powerful: don’t hide what makes you different.

I spent years smoothing out my quirks until I realized those quirks are what people find compelling. Ironically, aspiring influencers sometimes fake eccentricity. Think “Liver King”, when genuine oddity is far more interesting.

sschnei8 - 2 days ago

Another great way to increase your surface area for luck is being born in a first world country with access to a computer. I hear that has a good success rate!

wrp - 2 days ago

Many years ago, like maybe in the 1920s, the randomness of success in life was the focus of popular interest sufficiently to inspire scholarly research. I think it was mostly history professors who collected case studies of "lucky" people and tried to find patterns. I don't know how many publications resulted, but I read two or three books.

The books generally provided lists of observed patterns, usually at least a half dozen but sometimes a few times that. My takeaway from that reading was three general principles.

1. Location: The kind of events that you would consider relevant luck are not evenly distributed geographically. You need to be where they happen more often.

2. Preparation: At those locations, there will probably be multiple candidates waiting to take advantage of an opportunity. You need to aim to be the best candidate.

3. Flexibility: Your expectations for desirable opportunities have been molded by your limited knowledge of the world. You need to be ready to pursue opportunities that weren't exactly what you had in mind but may turn out to be just as satisfying.

TFA is hard to comment on because it feels like a rough draft. The reasoning could be sharpened. I have reservations about the "air your weirdness", because it seems to contradict the principle of flexibility.

csa - 2 days ago

For the curious, “luck surface area” was coined/popularized by Jason Roberts from the Techzing and Tropical MBA podcasts.

Our own patio11 (Patrick McKenzie) also helped propagate the concept.

The basic equation is L = D * T — that is, luck surface area equals doing times telling.

I think the author strays from the original concept a bit. She’s not necessarily wrong, but I get a sense of focusing on style over substance in most of her examples as compared to the original concept.

emptybits - 2 days ago

Fortis fortuna adiuvat. Fortune favours the bold. Just do it.

Take those risky leaps but I'd add that "luck" also favours the well-prepared.

foota - 2 days ago

I've always felt that a key part of my success comes from an intense curiosity. The alternative of course is to have won the birthright lottery for generations in a row, but unfortunately I'm not that lucky.

codelikeawolf - a day ago

> Talking to people without an end in mind other than satisfying your own curiosity is the slow way that is the fast way. People love to talk about what they’re interested in, and by extension love to talk to people who are genuinely curious about the things they’re interested in.

I feel like this is generally good advice just to grow as a person. I love hearing what people are into, even if it's not really my cup of tea. I get to learn something new that I probably never would have found on my own. Plus, I usually end up making a new friend.

gmuslera - 2 days ago

It may very opinionated towards exactly what/where/etc you are looking for. Increasing the number of interactions may also increase the odds of bad outcomes. The rest of the owl should be put in the picture too.

bravesoul2 - 2 days ago

Managing energy levels is my main bug here. Wish I had done this pre having kids but now with full time work and that I dont feel like socialising every day to this extent and moreover if I push through and do that I get more tired at work and underperform.

But I'm not a doomster so my plan is:

* Leverage stuff I have to do anyway at work for performance reviews. Initiatives means talking to new people at work.

* Attend school related social events.

* Family connections. No I'm not well connected like that, just chat to family.

trashface - a day ago

If luck is something an ordinary person can grow, why is it when I click on posts like this the author is either "Cate Hall" or someone else I've already heard of dozens of times, and not somebody new?

thenthenthen - a day ago

Mmm surface area * time = luck? You could also increase time to up your luck. Aka do nothing but just spend/waste time somewhere. This 100% works.

jslakro - 2 days ago

Today I was rereading an old link on the same topic from my bookmarks

https://www.codusoperandi.com/posts/increasing-your-luck-sur...

dawnofdusk - 2 days ago

Another take along similar lines can be found in the book The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives, by Leonard Mlodinow. Highly recommend.

grillitob - 2 days ago

"Increasing Surface Area for Luck? Don’t Just Show Up—Engage."

The advice to "increase your surface area for luck" by interacting more is half-right. The real leverage isn’t just volume—it’s receptivity.

    Forced interactions ≠ luck. Dragging yourself to a party disengaged? Skimming a book you don’t care about? You’re not expanding opportunities—you’re a ghost in the room. Luck sticks to presence, not proximity.

    Serendipity favors the prepared. Ever meet someone transformative because you were primed to listen? Or stumble on an idea because you were actively searching? That’s not randomness—it’s alertness meeting opportunity.

    True "surface area" is neurological. It’s the difference between hearing and listening, attending and connecting. Optimize for depth of engagement, not just foot traffic.
TL;DR: Luck isn’t passive. It’s the collision of action and attention.
BUFU - 2 days ago

This is the best title I've seen in a while.

humbleferret - 2 days ago

This piece hits on the idea you can cultivate luck. It's about increasing your 'Luck Surface Area' (L = D x T: Luck = Doing x Telling).

My notes/ points that stood out for me:

- Actively seek diverse social, intellectual, and professional interactions. Each one expands your surface area for serendipity. TAKE MORE SHOTS!

- Don't go into interactions with an agenda. Real interest opens doors unexpected.

- Always aim for excellence. Even in small tasks. People notice this. A strong reputation pulls in opportunity.

- Give before you take. Offer attention, time, or resources without expecting immediate return. That builds high trust relationships.

- Share your authentic self. Put your unique thoughts out there. It's a magnet for those who truly resonate with you. Don't fake it.

- Host stuff. Simple, low pressure events work best. Taking the initiative to create connections is often more effective than just showing up.

65 - 2 days ago

Step 1: Be an extreme extrovert

Step 2: Do not be anything other than an extreme extrovert

chankstein38 - 2 days ago

This reads like every single self-help book ever. "Grow and cultivate your network (and make sure you're genuine), dress for the job you want (or act like the job you want), other generic stuff about networking."

I don't know, I don't see an inherent issue with this, I think there's value in some things said here but I don't see a lot of value in "going out and meeting more than 1-2 people per week" or whatever. It feels like one of those things you read and get excited about then have no way to act because "Oh yeah let me just go meet people! At ... walmart maybe?"

taneq - 2 days ago

Do things, talk to people, engage. Note that this is different to “hustle”. Don’t try too hard to minmax, because that leaves no room for serendipity.

“Trust your luck, Taran Wanderer! But don’t forget to put out your nets!” - Llonio

Cuesta03 - a day ago

[dead]

eikenberry - 2 days ago

Poor title. Increasing the role of luck in your life has no upsides. You should do everything possible to reduce lucks role in your life as it can't be relied upon and you can only (and have to) plan for bad luck.