What’s the Danger (or Advantage) in Using Someone Else’s Roadmap?
What’s the Danger (or Advantage) in Using Someone Else’s Roadmap? Borrowed direction can save time—or quietly take you somewhere you never meant to go. Using someone else’s roadmap can feel smart, efficient, and reassuring. Why start from scratch when another person, team, or company has already cleared a path? But a borrowed roadmap is never neutral: it carries someone else’s assumptions, tradeoffs, goals, and definition of success. The real question is not whether another roadmap is useful, but whether it leads toward a future that actually fits you. Why borrowed roadmaps are so appealing There is real comfort in a ready-made path. Someone else has already tested the terrain, hit obstacles, and found a sequence that seems to work. In a world full of uncertainty, another person’s roadmap can feel like a flashlight in the dark. That is the first advantage: speed. A borrowed roadmap can save time, reduce confusion, and help you avoid beginner mistakes. Instead of staring at a...