Leverage

Small effort, large effect


Definition

Leverage is the ability to apply a small amount of force, effort, or resource to achieve a disproportionately large outcome. It’s the strategic placement of effort where it multiplies results. In physics, a lever lets you move heavy objects with less force. In decision-making, leverage lets you achieve outsized results with limited resources.

β€œGive me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.” β€” Archimedes


Types of Leverage

1. Labor Leverage

Hiring others to multiply your effort.

  • Example: CEO with 10,000 employees
  • Risk: Management overhead, coordination costs
  • Modern variant: Outsourcing, gig economy, automation

2. Capital Leverage

Using money to make more money.

  • Example: Investment, business ownership
  • Risk: Loss of principal, market volatility
  • Key: Deploy capital where returns exceed cost of capital

3. Technology/Code Leverage

Creating something once that serves millions.

  • Example: Software, media, products
  • Risk: Obsolescence, competition
  • Key: Zero marginal cost of replication

4. Network Leverage

Connecting people or systems that create value together.

  • Example: Platforms, marketplaces, social networks
  • Risk: Network collapse, disintermediation
  • Key: Network effects (value increases with size)

5. Knowledge/Brand Leverage

Reputation and expertise that open doors.

  • Example: Warren Buffett’s name, expert consultants
  • Risk: Reputation damage, becoming outdated
  • Key: Trust compounds over time

Finding Leverage Points

High-Impact, Low-Effort

Look for actions where:

  • Small input β†’ Large output
  • One-time effort β†’ Ongoing benefit
  • Fixed cost β†’ Scalable returns

Feedback Loops

Actions that start positive feedback:

  • Small win β†’ Confidence β†’ Bigger win
  • One connection β†’ Network β†’ More connections
  • One piece of content β†’ Audience β†’ More reach

Bottlenecks

The constraint in a system:

  • Removing a bottleneck unleashes flow
  • Small change at bottleneck = large system impact
  • Example: Fixing a slow database query speeds up entire app

Asymmetric Opportunities

Limited downside, unlimited upside:

  • Optionality (small cost to keep options open)
  • Convexity (benefit more from good outcomes than harm from bad)
  • Example: Buying cheap call options

Examples

Example 1: Writing

No leverage: Consulting (trading time for money)

With leverage: Writing a book

  • Write once
  • Sell forever
  • Reach millions
  • Build reputation

Example 2: Software

No leverage: Custom development for one client

With leverage: SaaS product

  • Build once
  • Serve millions
  • Zero marginal cost
  • Network effects possible

Example 3: Decision-Making

No leverage: Deciding every operational detail

With leverage: Creating principles/frameworks

  • Decide once
  • Apply repeatedly
  • Scale decision-making
  • Free up cognitive resources

Example 4: Relationships

No leverage: Networking transactionally

With leverage: Building genuine reputation

  • Be helpful consistently
  • Compound trust over time
  • Doors open without knocking
  • Opportunities come to you

The Dark Side

Negative Leverage

Small errors can have massive consequences:

  • Nuclear weapons (small decision β†’ massive destruction)
  • Systemic financial risks
  • Viral misinformation

Leverage Amplifies

Both good and bad outcomes are magnified.

  • High leverage + good judgment = extraordinary results
  • High leverage + bad judgment = catastrophic failure

Fragility

Highly leveraged systems can collapse suddenly:

  • Financial leverage (margin calls)
  • Reputation leverage (one scandal)
  • Technical debt (one failure cascades)

Building Leverage

In Career

  1. Develop rare, valuable skills
  2. Create public work (writing, code, products)
  3. Build genuine relationships
  4. Seek ownership (equity, IP)

In Business

  1. Build products with zero marginal cost
  2. Create network effects
  3. Develop brand/reputation
  4. Automate and systematize

In Life

  1. Learn principles that apply broadly
  2. Build systems, not just goals
  3. Create content that persists
  4. Invest in relationships that compound


References

  • Archimedes (c. 250 BCE). On the Equilibrium of Planes
  • Thiel, P. (2014). Zero to One (on leverage in startups)
  • Naval Ravikant (2019). How to Get Rich (tweetstorm on leverage)
  • Ferriss, T. (2007). The 4-Hour Workweek (on automation and outsourcing)

Find the fulcrum. Apply force efficiently. Move the world. 🌍