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How do you design constraints that force better thinking?

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How do you design constraints that force better thinking? The art of boxing yourself in—on purpose. Framing the Question Designing constraints is less about limitation and more about focus. When you  design constraints  well, you narrow the field of options just enough that your brain stops flailing and starts reasoning. Instead of “we can do anything,” you’re working inside a deliberate sandbox that makes tradeoffs visible and assumptions impossible to ignore. In this post, we’ll explore how to create constraints that sharpen judgment, unlock creativity, and prevent lazy default thinking. Along the way, you’ll see practical examples and patterns you can reuse whenever you want deeper, better thinking—alone or with a team. Why constraints can make us smarter If total freedom were the secret to great thinking, open-ended brainstorms would always work. They don’t. Constraints help because they: Reduce decision overload so you can actually move. Force you to choose what really ma...