
2 days ago
The Hidden Power of Low Leverage (And How to Use It Strategically) | Lazy Leverage #59
In an age obsessed with scale, speed, and leverage, it’s easy to forget that the best long-term advantage might come from doing the exact opposite.
Call it the "Low Leverage Advantage."
When you're early in your career—or launching something new—there’s a strong case for diving into the work yourself. Not delegating. Not automating. Just doing. Need to onboard a new sales team? Write the first 20 cold DMs yourself. Building a new ops process? Sit next to the team member buried in outdated workflows and fix it together.
Why? Because high leverage comes from judgment. And judgment comes from getting close to the metal. It’s why executives driving Ubers for a week makes more sense than another offsite. Or why a CEO helping troubleshoot a Dropbox error can spark more productivity than another strategy session.
But the magic doesn’t stop at work. Trying to optimize your personal life with AI prompts and workflows? Terrible idea. Your kids don’t need you to delegate bedtime—they need you to show up. Presence is low leverage, but it’s high value.
The trick? Learn to oscillate. Plant with intimacy, harvest with leverage. Create media, but still get your hands dirty. Record podcasts, but stay close to the customer. Don’t chase scale so hard that you forget where insights come from.
Low leverage isn’t a step backward—it’s an intentional investment in depth. And if you document along the way, even the mundane becomes future leverage. Your dusty SOP doc? Might be the foundation of your next seven-figure business.
Leverage and scale will come, but only if you show up, do the work, and remain consistent.
Key Topics:
(03:08) Why (and When to) Go Low Leverage?
(10:19) How Low Leverage Activities Build Loyalty with Team Members
(17:08) Laying the Groundwork Early on in Your Business
(23:05) Learning New Skills with Low Leverage Work
(31:00) Creating a Body of Work That Makes the Best Use of Your Time
(40:25) Nurturing Growth by Encouraging Healthy Debates
(48:22) Why Respectful Disagreement Between Team Members is Good for Business
(53:27) Jon and Peter’s Latest AI Breakthroughs
Stay connected for more insights and strategies by following:
Jon: @MatznerJon on X and at lazyleverage.beehiiv.com
Peter: @pslohmann on X and at peterlohmann.com
Comments (0)
To leave or reply to comments, please download free Podbean or
No Comments
To leave or reply to comments,
please download free Podbean App.