At a recent event, I watched Eric M. Bailey, the bestselling author of The Cure for Stupidity, do something most speakers do not: he made the room feel different. Not “inspired for a day” different. More like “I’m going to think about this next week when I’m frustrated at work” different.
These are my notes, organized so you can apply them inside your organization right now. If your team is stretched thin, if meetings feel heavier than they should, or if you are tired of “dealing with people” being the hardest part of your job, this one is worth your time.
Most of us work in environments where:
Eric’s core point was simple: if you want different results, you have to do something different. And the best signal that you are doing something different is that it feels different.
Eric frames healthy teams and healthy workplaces through three fundamentals:
When those three are strong, work feels lighter, faster, and more human. When those three break down, everything feels harder than it needs to.
Eric kicked off with a deceptively simple exercise: count the letter “F” in a sentence
Most people were highly confident and still wrong.
That is the point.
The illusion of certainty is our brain’s habit of projecting confidence even when we do not have enough information.
You see it when:
Confidence is not proof of correctness.
So in meetings, planning, and decision making, build in space for:
That extra minute saves days later.
Eric used a second exercise around recognizing the Apple logo. People were confident until they saw multiple options. Then the confidence collapsed.
He calls that moment the Oh Crap Gap.
That gap is uncomfortable, but it is also valuable because it is the space where learning can happen.
When you feel yourself getting defensive, irritated, or rushed to prove you are right, pause and label it:
That mental reset keeps you curious instead of combative.
Eric pushed hard on this:
If you do not know something, try saying:
That is not a weakness. That is leadership and trust building in real time.
Eric is an introvert, and he says what introverts already know: small talk can feel brutal.
But his point was important:
So he uses better questions, questions that spark stories.
Use these in meetings, events, onboarding, or even at the start of a Zoom call:
This is not fluff. Curiosity creates connection, and connection makes collaboration easier.
Eric shared research that boils down to this:
In collaborative environments, teams see improvements like:
If you want better performance, you cannot optimize tools and workflows alone.
You also have to optimize the human environment, because isolation increases friction, delays, and burnout.
Eric drew a clean contrast:
Know-it-all culture
Collaborator culture
A simple test
When someone shares good news (a project win, a vacation, a milestone), does your team respond with:
“That’s awesome, tell me more.”
or
“Oh yeah, I’ve done that, here’s what you should avoid.”
That difference is culture.
Eric tackled one of the biggest friction points in organizations: misunderstandings.
His key idea:
So what you say matters less than what they hear. What you do matters less than what they feel.
You can write something that is “technically correct” and still create a negative reaction if:
The fix is not “say it louder.”
The fix is “communicate for how it will land.”
One of the most useful tools Eric shared is a tiny phrase shift.
When you want to say:
Add four words: “But I want to.”
So it becomes:
When you lower your power into curiosity, people lower their defenses. That is how conversations move from debate to dialogue.
1) Create one “radical curiosity” norm
In meetings, encourage one phrase:
2) Replace “I know” with one follow-up question
Any time you want to say “I know,” ask:
3) Start one meeting with a better question
Pick one connection question and use it for 3 minutes.
4) Audit your communication for perception risk
Before sending a message to members or staff, ask:
If there is one message from Eric’s session that I want to carry forward, it is this:
Learning is more important than knowing.
Teams move faster when people feel safe admitting what they do not know, asking better questions, and staying curious instead of certain.
Have a GREAT day.