It’s oddly compelling to learn that Jennifer Aniston ate the same salad every day on the set of Friends. There’s something almost reassuring about it: even people at the top of their profession fall into food monotony and call it a preference.
Tim Cook wakes at 3:45 AM, a fact repeated so often it feels less like impressive discipline and more like a cautionary note. He uses those hours for emails, strategy, and global operations before heading to the gym at 5:00 AM. Warren Buffett reportedly drinks five Cokes a day, confirming that extraordinary financial success doesn’t require nutritional rigor. Beyoncé has attacked extreme diets with the same intensity she brings to everything else: juice cleanses, the baby food diet, the Master Cleanse she endured for Dreamgirls. Jack Dorsey goes further still: one meal a day during the week, nothing on weekends.
The habits are interesting. Copying them is where things go wrong. Waking at 4 AM won’t make anyone a tech executive. Matching Buffett’s Coke intake leads to dental bills, not investment returns. Beyoncé’s liquid diets won’t launch a music career. What works for a specific person in a specific context, built on a specific history, doesn’t translate outside it. To copy the habits of the famous is to admit you have none of your own.
The most effective routines aren’t borrowed. They’re built through honest self-assessment: how you think, when you focus, what you need to perform well. Elite habits make useful prompts for reflection. As blueprints, they’re distractions.
Idea for Impact: The only routine worth optimizing is yours. Not a modified version of someone else’s, not an aspirational approximation. Yours, built from the ground up around how you actually work.
The first question before launching a public fight isn’t Are we right? It’s Can we withstand the same scrutiny we’re about to apply to our opponent?
Most managers treat
That instinct has a name. Hanlon’s Razor, coined by Robert J. Hanlon in a collection of
Most advice on listening is predictable:
In 1992, a Silicon Valley
Everyone carries an inner critic. It fills quiet moments with familiar doubts: I have to do this perfectly. If I try, I might fail. I’m not good enough. I’ll never catch up.
Anna Wintour