A few years ago, I noticed something interesting.
When people would come to me with a business challenge, they often asked one of two types of questions.
The first sounded something like this:
“What if this doesn’t work?”
“What if I lose money?”
“What if nobody buys?”
“What if I make the wrong decision?”
And honestly, those questions are 100% fair.
It’s normal to have some doubts and fears about something you’re passionate about.
We’ve all asked them. I’ve asked them.
The problem is that those questions tend to focus your attention on protecting what you already have.
Whether it’s your time, your money, your comfort, or even protecting yourself from disappointment.
And while there’s certainly a place for caution, I’ve found that caution rarely creates growth.
The second type of question sounds different.
Instead of asking:
“What if this doesn’t work?”
They ask:
“How would I make this work?”
Instead of asking:
“Can I afford this?”
They ask:
“How could I afford this?”
Instead of asking:
“What if I fail?”
They ask:
“What would I learn if I did?”
Instead of asking:
“Why isn’t this working?”
They ask:
“What am I not seeing yet?”
Now here’s the important part….
The difference isn’t intelligence, or experience or a level of leadership you haven’t unlocked.
It’s attention, and what they choose to direct their focus on.
And whatever your mind focuses on, it begins looking for evidence to support.
If you ask:
“Why is this so hard?”
Your brain will immediately start giving you answers.
If you ask:
“What’s the opportunity here?”
It starts searching for those answers too.
The quality of your questions shapes the quality of your decisions.
And over time, the quality of your decisions shapes the quality of your results.
One of the biggest shifts I made in business was realizing that wealth isn’t just a money game.
It’s a thinking game.
I remember early in my entrepreneurial journey constantly looking at investments through the lens of cost.
How much does it cost?
What if I don’t make my money back?
What if it doesn’t work for me?
And while those questions felt responsible, they weren’t helping me grow.
Because the people I admired weren’t asking those questions.
They were asking:
What do I need to invest now that will help me solve this problem
How much is this problem already costing me?
Who do I need to become to operate at the next level?
Those questions create completely different decisions.
And eventually, completely different outcomes.
That curiosity is incredibly valuable.
Because every challenge contains information.
Every setback contains information.
Every disappointing result contains information.
And the people who build extraordinary businesses learn how to extract it.
So today, I want you to pay attention to the questions you’ve been asking yourself lately.
Are they creating possibility?
Or reinforcing limitation?
Are they helping you grow?
Or helping you stay safe?
Because your future is often hidden inside the questions you’re repeatedly asking yourself.
And sometimes the fastest way to change your results is to change the question.






