7 Ways to Strategic Thinking Like Julia Child
By AI Anyone Team · 2025-10-17 · 3 min read · Business and Leadership
7 actionable tips for improving your strategic thinking skills, inspired by the approach of Julia Child.
When we started building AI Anyone... Strategic Thinking is one of the most valuable capabilities you can develop, and few people have demonstrated it as powerfully as Julia Child. Whether you are just starting out or looking to sharpen skills you have been building for years, these 7 actionable tips will help you improve immediately.
1. Argue the Opposite Position
Whatever conclusion you have reached, spend ten minutes building the strongest possible case against it. This practice, called steel manning, exposes blind spots in your reasoning and either strengthens your original position or reveals that you need to rethink it.
2. Separate the Problem from the Solution
Before proposing answers, make sure you have thoroughly defined the problem. Write down exactly what is wrong, who it affects, and why it matters. Solutions generated from a clear problem definition are dramatically better than those generated from a vague sense that something needs to change.
3. Use the Five Whys Technique
When you identify a problem, ask why it exists. When you get an answer, ask why again. Repeat this five times. By the fifth why, you are usually looking at the root cause rather than a symptom. This simple technique prevents you from solving the wrong problem.
4. Think in Systems, Not Events
Instead of reacting to individual events, look for the patterns and structures that produce them. A single customer complaint is an event. The process that caused it is a system. Fixing events is temporary. Fixing systems is permanent.
5. Set a Timer for Decisions
Give yourself a specific amount of time to make a decision, then commit. Analysis paralysis kills more good ideas than bad judgment does. Most decisions are reversible, and the cost of delay usually exceeds the cost of an imperfect choice.
6. Write Down Your Reasoning Before You Decide
Documenting your thought process before making a decision creates accountability and a learning record. When you look back in six months, you can evaluate not just whether the outcome was good, but whether your reasoning was sound.
7. Challenge Your Information Sources
Before accepting any claim, ask three questions: who is making this claim, what evidence supports it, and what would change your mind about it. This habit protects you from misinformation and trains your brain to evaluate rather than simply absorb.
Strategic Thinking improves with practice, not with perfection. Pick one or two tips from this list and commit to applying them this week. Small, consistent changes produce remarkable results over time.
If Julia Child's approach to strategic thinking resonates with you, explore more of their teaching style at Julia Child.
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