Big Ideas Made Simple

Jess Webber

Big Ideas Made Simple is for fast thinkers who are tired of hiding behind hustle and perfection. Hosted by Jess Webber, this show challenges socially acceptable habits like busyness, over-refining, and endless optimization—and replaces them with clear frameworks that create traction. This is not a productivity podcast. It’s a decision-making podcast. If you generate ideas easily but struggle to commit, contain, or ship them, this show will help you turn intelligence into visible impact.

Episoder

  1. 5 DAGE SIDEN

    Stop Thinking. Start.

    You cannot think your way to momentum. You have to move your way there. You have done the work. You have gotten clear on who you are, named the thread, and shown up as the whole version of yourself. And yet here you are. Still thinking about it. Still refining the language in your head. Still running mental simulations of conversations you have not had yet. What you are experiencing is not laziness. It is not a discipline problem. It is not evidence that you are not ready. It is a thinking silo. And the only way out of a thinking silo is not more thinking. In Episode 10 of Big Ideas Made Simple, Jess gets into what actually lives in the gap between knowing and doing, why it is an integration problem not a discipline problem, and the one move that closes it. Not a ten step framework. One move. What This Episode Is Really AboutClarity is not the finish line. It is the starting gun. And there is a gap between the two that almost nobody names honestly. You cannot integrate a new identity by thinking about it more carefully in the same room where you started thinking about it. You have to take it outside your own head and let it make contact with the real world. Phil M. Jones writes in Exactly Where to Start that being brave enough to start is all the chance that you need. And that once you master the ability to make a start, you earn the ability to start over as many times as you desire. The start is not just the first step. It is the skill. In This EpisodeWhy the gap between knowing and doing is an integration problem, not a discipline problemWhat a thinking silo actually is and why more thinking will never get you out of oneClarity as the starting gun, not the finish linePhil M. Jones, Exactly Where to Start, and why being brave enough to start is all the chance you needWhat Jess did with NotebookLM, two Phil M. Jones books, and an ADHD brain in the same afternoonWhy the language gets dialled in through the conversation, not before itWhat resonance actually is and why it is what you are looking for, not permissionBig Ideas Made Simple sat as an idea for over a year — the pancakes conversation that changed thatWhy imposter syndrome lives in the silo and loses power on contactOne assignment for the week, not a list The Big IdeaYou cannot think your way to momentum. You have to move your way there. And the move does not have to be public or loud or perfect. It just has to be real. One conversation with one safe person where you give yourself permission to be unfinished. Memorable Lines from This Episode"You cannot think your way to momentum. You have to move your way there." "Clarity is not the finish line. It is the starting gun." "The language gets dialled in through the conversation. The confidence gets built by having it." "Imposter syndrome lives in the silo. It thrives on isolation and enjoys blocking the door on the way out." "You cannot think your way out of imposter syndrome. You can only act your way out of it." "It started with one honest conversation in a safe space across from some pancakes, and then it built from there." "Big Ideas Made Simple was talked into existence, conversation by conversation, room by room." "Get out of the silo and go have a conversation." Book ReferencedExactly Where to Start by Phil M. Jones - https://amzn.to/3Qht6xA Your One Thing This WeekHave one conversation. Not a pitch, not a launch, not a public declaration. One conversation with one person who knows you well enough to reflect back what is actually true. Tell them the working version, not the polished one. Give them the unfinished thing. Say it out loud. Then stop talking and listen to what comes back. And if you do not have that person yet, come find Jess at BigIdeasMadeSimple.com. Connect with JessIf this one gave you the permission to pick up the phone or send a text today, come find me at BigIdeasMadeSimple.com. That is where the newsletter lives, where everything I am building is taking shape, and where you can connect with me directly if you need a person to start the conversation with. And if you know someone who has been sitting on something real for longer than they should have, send them this one. Sometimes the right idea at the right time is the only permission people need. Key ThemesThe knowing-doing gap as an integration problemThinking silos and how to break out of themStarting as a skill, not a single eventImposter syndrome as an isolation problemTrusted relationships as a thinking toolResonance versus permission seekingExecution anxiety and high-agency operators

    22 min.
  2. 6. APR.

    Stop Letting People Define Your Filter

    Filtering yourself does not protect you from rejection. It protects you from connection. In this episode, Jess gets into the thing nobody tells you about playing it safe in rooms: the filter does not protect you from the thing you think it is protecting you from. Filtering yourself does not protect you from rejection. It prevents connection. And those are not the same thing. This is Episode 9 in an ongoing arc that started with getting out of your own way, moved through finding the thread and letting it pull you forward, and arrives here at the most personal episode yet. Because all the clarity and positioning and decision-making in the world only matters if the whole version of you is actually the one showing up. What This Episode Is Really AboutThere are two completely different kinds of filters. The first comes from alignment and it is discernment — reading the room and making a conscious choice about what is useful to bring. The second comes from fear, and it wears the same clothes as the first. It calls itself professionalism. It calls itself not wanting to make anyone uncomfortable. But underneath, what it is doing is offering a smaller, more digestible version of you before anyone has even asked for it. Glennon Doyle writes in Untamed that there is no glory except through your story. Not the curated version. The actual one. And she talks about the Knowing — the signal that has been there the whole time, waiting for you to stop long enough to hear it. This episode is about learning to hear it. And about what becomes possible when you finally do. In This EpisodeThe difference between a filter that comes from alignment and one that comes from fear — and how to tell them apart in real timeWhy the fear filter does not just hide you from other people — it keeps you moving too fast to hear yourselfGlennon Doyle's Untamed — the Knowing, the stillness, and why there is no glory except through your storyThe Good Luck Chuck pattern Jess kept repeating in relationships — and what it finally cost herThe mid-afternoon movie pause, the most unromantic proposal setup in history, and why it workedThe Pink Skirt Project — the first ticket Jess ever bought for herself, and what happened when she showed up as just JessThe whispered networking story and what it means to show up not whispering in any sense of the wordA three-step filter audit to take into the week The Three-Step Filter AuditRecognize the filter — notice the physical tells before the cognitive ones: shorter sentences, safer words, nodding at things you disagree withName the fear underneath it — not the story, the specific honest thing driving itPractice without it in one room — not everywhere, not all at once, just one conversation where you do not compress before you know whether compression is even necessary Memorable Lines from This Episode"Filtering yourself does not protect you from rejection. It prevents connection. And those are not the same thing." "The fear filter does not just hide you from other people. It keeps you moving so fast you cannot hear yourself either." "A mirror cannot be chosen. It can only be used." "The pattern was not the problem. The fit was." "She was not whispering. In any sense of the word." "There is no glory except through your story." "Stop letting other people define your filter. They were never qualified for the job." "The confidence to show up whole is not something you find after you feel ready. It is something you build by showing up before you do." Book ReferencedUntamed by Glennon Doyle - https://amzn.to/4e1AZB2 Your One Thing This WeekPick one room this week where you let a little more of the whole version of you show up than you normally would. Not everywhere. Not all at once. One room. One conversation. One moment where you choose not to compress before you know whether compression is even necessary. Then pay attention to who meets you there. Connect with JessIf something in this one cracked something open, come find me at BigIdeasMadeSimple.com. That is where the newsletter lives, where everything I am building is starting to take shape, and where you can connect with me directly. One idea in your inbox every week, nothing else. And if you know someone who has been sending out the mirror version for way too long, send them this one. The right idea at the right time changes everything. Key ThemesAuthenticity and identityThe cost of the fear filter in relationships and professional lifeDiscernment versus self-erasureBelonging versus being toleratedThe thread as a sorting tool for people and roomsConfidence as a practice, not a prerequisiteCommunity and finding your people

    31 min.
  3. 30. MAR.

    The Thread That Pulls You Forward

    Having the thread does not simplify life. It simplifies your relationship to it. In this episode, Jess closes the loop on the last three episodes and answers the question she left you with: okay, you named the thread. Now what? Because naming it is the beginning, not the finish line. And the move from having a thread to actually using it to build something coherent and lasting is exactly where most people stall out. This is Episode 8 and the third in a series that started with getting out of your own way, moved through finding the thread, and arrives here at letting it pull you forward. You do not need the previous episodes to get value from this one. But if you have been following along, this is where it all starts to click. What This Episode Is Really AboutMost people think that once they find their thread, clarity will just cascade. Decisions will make themselves. The right opportunities will show up labelled correctly and the wrong ones will be easy to decline. That is not what happens. What actually happens is that life keeps moving at exactly the same pace. The inbox does not slow down. The opportunities do not come with alignment scores attached. And the calendar still wants to be filled. Having the thread does not simplify life. It simplifies your relationship to it. And this episode is about how to actually use it — as the orientation tool that runs through every significant decision you make. In This EpisodeWhy finding the thread is the beginning, not the destinationThe preschool rope line visual — and what it actually means to be directionally tetheredWhy wandering is not the problem. Wandering without a tether isThe five decision categories the thread touches: build, price, connect, show up, and say noHow each category leads naturally into the next and why the sequence mattersThe real estate offer Jess said no to — and exactly how the three-question check made the decision cleanThe sponsor booth that turned into an opening keynote — and why the thread told her to show up before the ROI was visibleA three-question decision audit you can run before the episode is over The Three-Question Decision AuditAny time a decision feels complicated or sticky, run these three questions in order: Does this let me be more fully what my thread says I am, or does it ask me to compress part of that to fit someone else's container?Is the person or room or opportunity on the other side of this moving in the same direction I am moving in?If I say yes to this, what am I effectively saying no to? That third question is the one most people skip. And it is the one that does the most work. Memorable Lines from This Episode"Having the thread does not simplify life. It simplifies your relationship to it." "The wandering without a tether is the problem. Not the wandering itself." "The thread does not eliminate wandering. It makes coming back easier." "A clean no is one of the most powerful things you can offer yourself as someone building something that is genuinely yours." "You cannot engineer the right opportunity. But you can create the conditions for it." "The thread is not a destination. It is a direction. Now go use it." Your One Thing This WeekLook at the decisions sitting in front of you right now. Not the abstract future ones. The ones in your inbox or on your calendar that you have been quietly avoiding. Pick one. Run the three questions. And be honest about what comes up. Connect with JessIf this one gave you something you can actually use, come find me at BigIdeasMadeSimple.com. That is where the newsletter lives, where you can grab the guide on making the leap between AI tools without losing your voice, and where everything I am building is starting to take shape. And if you know someone sitting on a decision right now, trying to figure out whether something is worth saying yes to or finally worth saying no to, send them this one. The thread works whether or not they have heard the previous episodes. Key ThemesThe thread as an orientation tool, not an identity statementDecision-making frameworks for high-agency operatorsSaying no from a position of clarity rather than fearBuilding coherence across multiple expressions of one functionTrust and alignment before ROI is visibleThe compounding effect of consistent, tethered action

    30 min.
  4. 23. MAR.

    Find the Thread

    You are not missing a thread. You are missing the language for the one you have always been holding. In this episode, Jess gets into what finding your thread actually looks like from the inside — and it is not a clean, orchestrated moment. It is not a retreat or a worksheet or a lightning bolt of clarity while you are journaling over a perfectly manicured lawn with your favorite coffee. It is usually a conversation you were having for a completely different reason. This is Episode 7, the direct follow-up to last week's conversation about getting out of your own way. That episode was about recognising the container no longer fits. This one is about naming what you find when you stop trying to fit back into one. What This Episode Is Really AboutMost people think they are missing their thread. They are not. They are standing inside it. The thread has been quietly running through every role, project, pivot, and problem they have ever touched. The reason they cannot see it is the same reason you cannot read the label from inside the jar. This episode is about the difference between following your passion and following your pattern. Between reaching for the next container and finally naming the thing that runs through all of them. And between describing what you do and being so clear on your thread that everything else becomes proof of it. In This EpisodeWhy your discomfort is not a distraction — it is a directionThe real reason you cannot see your own thread yet (and why that is not a you problem)Why patterns do not lie the way feelings doThe cobbler's children, the AI tools we are all using, and the guide at BigIdeasMadeSimple.comA very deliberate Sharpie, a hardcover book, and what Donald Miller said about building work that lastsWhat happened when Jess had to name her thread to someone who would see straight through anything vagueOne question to carry into the week The Big IdeaStop following your passion. Follow your pattern. The thread is not something you invent. It is something you finally stop being too close to see. And once you name it, everything else you have ever built stops looking like a scattered list and starts reading as a body of work. Memorable Lines from This Episode"You are not missing a thread. You are missing the language for the one you have always been holding." "Stop following your passion. Follow your pattern." "Patterns do not lie the way feelings do." "You cannot read the label from inside the jar." "The thread is not something you invent. It is something you finally stop being too close to see." "The thread has the power to remove any imposter syndrome that crept in because you could not name the pattern before." "Your discomfort has been trying to tell you something. It is time to listen." Book ReferencedBuilding a StoryBrand by Donald Miller - https://amzn.to/3NhrqTW Your One Thing This WeekAsk yourself: what problem do I have a unique solution to that I keep being called back to, regardless of room, title, industry, or context? Not what do you do. What keeps finding you even when it is not in the job description? Connect with JessIf the thread feels a little less like something you are chasing and a little more like something you are finally close enough to name, come find me at BigIdeasMadeSimple.com. Connect directly, grab the guide on making the leap between AI tools without losing your voice, and get on the weekly newsletter — one idea worth sitting with, straight to your inbox every week. And if you know someone right now who is reaching for the next thing when the thread is already in their hand, pass this one along. The right idea at the right time changes things. Key ThemesIdentity and personal positioningPattern recognition over passion chasingThe thread as leverage out of the wrong containerVisibility and clarity of messageHigh-agency operators and the gap between doing and namingImposter syndrome as a naming problem, not a competence problemAI tools and original thoughtBuilding a StoryBrand framework applied personally

    25 min.
  5. 16. MAR.

    Get Out of Your Own Way

    What if the voice telling you to stay small isn't fear? What if it's just a really well-dressed memory? In this episode, Jess gets honest about the pattern she spent years calling humility before she finally recognised it for what it actually was: a protection system running old programming for a version of her life she had already outgrown. This is Episode 6, a direct continuation of last week's conversation about confidence as a byproduct of clarity. That episode was about arriving at confidence. This one is about what keeps you from letting it out once you get there. What This Episode Is Really AboutMost people think the thing keeping them small is fear. But fear is loud. Fear is obvious. What actually keeps high-agency, multi-faceted people from showing up fully is something far more sophisticated: a learned pattern that has been quietly promoted from protecting your ideas to editing your identity. And the reason it is so hard to catch is that it never shows up looking like fear. It shows up looking like perfectionism, timing, research, or generosity. It wears reasonable clothes. It sounds completely legitimate from the inside. And that is exactly what makes it so expensive. In This EpisodeWhy the thing keeping you small is a memory, not a malfunctionThe four disguises the protective pattern wears and how to recognise each oneHow Jen Gottlieb's Be Seen and her Stage Leader program helped Jess step out from behind a tool she was using to manage her own visibilityThe box as a vehicle: why the containers you have lived in were never meant to be permanentThe integrator pricing story: what the most expensive kindness Jess ever showed herself actually looked likeOne honest question to carry into the week The Big IdeaThe box was not a trap. It was a vehicle. It got you somewhere real. But a vehicle is not a destination, and the version of you that keeps folding itself back in is not being careful. It is being loyal to a season that has already ended. You were supposed to grow until the container could not hold you anymore. That is not a problem. That is the whole point. Memorable Lines from This Episode"The thing keeping you small is not fear. It is memory.""Visibility is not vanity. And keeping yourself tucked back is not humility. It is a different kind of cost with significantly better optics.""It was genuinely the most expensive kindness I ever showed myself.""The container was never the truth of you. It was always just the current vehicle.""It is okay to be a little bit of a unicorn. The goal was never to become a horse. The goal was to stop apologising for the horn.""Confidence does not get edited out. It gets cleared in." Book ReferencedBe Seen by Jen Gottlieb - https://amzn.to/4ltVpVg Your One Thing This WeekNotice the moment you start making yourself smaller. And when you catch it, ask yourself one honest question: is this protecting me from something real, or is it protecting a version of me that no longer exists? Connect with JessIf this one landed, come find me at BigIdeasMadeSimple.com. That is where you can connect directly, see everything being built, and get on the weekly newsletter where I send one idea worth sitting with straight to your inbox every week. And if you know someone who needed to hear this today, I have a feeling you do. Share it with them. The right idea at the right time changes things. Key ThemesIdentity and self-worthVisibility and authenticityThe inner critic as a role-design problemHigh-agency operators and execution anxietyPersonal evolution and outgrowing old containersConfidence as a byproduct of clarityEntrepreneurship and pricing psychologyNeurodivergent experience and masking

    23 min.
  6. 9. MAR.

    Confidence is a Byproduct

    What if the reason you're not showing up confidently in rooms has nothing to do with your mindset — and everything to do with whether you actually know who you are in them? In this episode, Jess shares a moment of recognition at a major industry event that stopped her in her tracks — not because of what she said or who she knew, but because of who she had consistently shown up as across multiple ecosystems over time. Her name was the entire introduction. And that changed everything about how she thinks about confidence. This is Episode 5 and a direct continuation of last week's idea: perspective is a proximity play. That episode was about getting in the right rooms. This one is about who you actually are once you're in them. Because getting in the right room is only half of it. What This Episode Is Really AboutMost people believe confidence is built by being seen — collecting the right stages, titles, associations, and proximity to names that carry weight. But that's borrowed authority. And borrowed authority has a ceiling, because it's not yours. Drawing from Jenny Wood's Wild Courage and her own evolution as a speaker, educator, and entrepreneur, Jess breaks down why confidence isn't something you construct — it's something that emerges as a byproduct of two things: clarity and presence. And why the moment you stop needing to prove yourself is often the moment you become most memorable. If You've Ever…Name-dropped or led with borrowed authority to feel credibleVerbally processed everything out loud hoping the answers would make you trustworthyWalked out of a networking conversation wondering if they got itOver-explained what you do before anyone even askedFelt the pull to lead with your resume instead of your presenceHad so much to offer that slowing down to ask a question first felt counterintuitive This episode will shift how you show up in the next room you walk into. What You'll LearnWhy borrowed authority keeps you at a ceiling — and what replaces itThe two things that actually generate lasting confidence: clarity and presenceHow knowing your North Star changes the way you filter opportunities and connectionsWhy people can feel whether you're with them or working them — and what to do about itThe honest truth about ADHD pattern recognition as a gift that can work for or against connectionWhy contribution-led connection is not the same as sourcing your identity from usefulnessHow to let tenacity feel natural instead of forced The One Practice (Your Next Step)Ask one question before you offer one answer. In the next room you walk into, resist the impulse to lead with what you know, what you've done, or what you think they need. Ask one real question first — not as a tactic, but as a genuine act of presence. Because you've done enough work on your own clarity that you don't need to prove anything. That frees you up to actually be interested in the person in front of you. And that's where real connection — and real confidence — lives. Key ThemesConfidence vs. Borrowed AuthorityClarity and North Star AlignmentPresence Over PerformanceContribution-Led ConnectionADHD as a Superpower (and When It Gets in the Way)Identity Built Through Proximity and ConsistencyAuthentic Leadership and EntrepreneurshipPersonal Evolution and Integration Memorable Lines from This Episode"Confidence isn't constructed. It's uncovered." "Your name should be enough. And it will be — when who you are matches how you show up." "Tenacity feels natural when you're not auditioning." "Over-explanation is insecurity wrapped in data." "Confidence is a byproduct of clarity and presence." "Confidence isn't loud. It isn't borrowed. It's just you — clearly." "Your name becomes the introduction." Connect with JessIf this resonated, share it with someone who might be in a season of figuring out who they are outside of titles, roles, or borrowed credibility. Because that season isn't a setback. It's the work. And if you're navigating your own evolution in leadership, entrepreneurship, or speaking — clarity isn't loud. It's steady. 👉 https://jesswebber.com 👉 https://bigideasmadesimple.com

    23 min.
  7. 2. MAR.

    Perspective Is a Proximity Play

    Why do some rooms drain you while others energize you — even when the event looks the same on the outside? In this episode, Jess shares a powerful 3 a.m. realization that changed how she sees productivity, performance, and personal growth: Perspective is a proximity play. After attending Keller Williams Family Reunion with 11,000 people, Jess noticed something unexpected. The biggest shift wasn’t the speakers, the stage, or the environment. It was how she structured her time and how she showed up. Drawing from Dr. Benjamin Hardy’s Willpower Doesn’t Work and her background in brain-based learning, Jess explains why: Willpower is a short-term strategyOver-scheduling creates identity fatigueEnvironment design matters more than motivationPerformance mode drains executive functionMargin changes your brainConfidence grows when you stop auditioning If you’ve ever: Over-explained your credentialsLed with borrowed authorityFelt exhausted after “networking”Tried to earn your place in rooms you already belong inConfused strategy with fear of closing doors This episode will help you rethink how you structure your schedule, your obligations, and the rooms you choose to be in. Because clarity doesn’t come from pushing harder. It comes from designing better conditions. What You’ll LearnThe neurological reason willpower burns you outWhy identity management fatigue is realHow over-scheduling creates fragmentationThe difference between earning and owningHow to stop auditioning in professional roomsWhy environment reinforces identityHow to conduct your own “Proximity Audit” The Proximity Audit (Practical Takeaways)If perspective is a proximity play, start here: 1. Schedule Audit Where are you over-scheduling to feel important? What would happen if you cut 30%? 2. Identity Audit When someone asks what you do — do you over-explain? Try stating who you are becoming… and stop talking. 3. Room Audit Where do you feel like you’re auditioning? Where do you feel integrated? Spend more time in the second category. Key ThemesWillpower vs Environment DesignExecutive Function & Cognitive LoadLeadership IdentityAuthentic NetworkingPersonal EvolutionEntrepreneurship & GrowthBrain-Based Behavior Memorable Lines from This Episode“Willpower tries to force identity. Environment reinforces identity.” “Tenacity feels natural when you’re not auditioning.” “Optionality can look strategic. But sometimes it’s fear of closing doors.” “You don’t need more grit. You need better design.” “Perspective will shift when proximity shifts.” Connect with JessIf this resonated, share it with someone who might be quietly trying to earn their place. And if you're navigating your own evolution in leadership, entrepreneurship, or speaking — clarity isn't loud. It's steady. Learn more at: 👉 https://jesswebber.com 👉 https://bigideasmadesimple.com

    16 min.
  8. 23. FEB.

    Clarity Lives in Subtraction (And why 10x Thinking Requires Elimination)

    Clarity is not something you find. It’s something you remove your way into. In this episode, Jess unpacks why high-capacity, fast-thinking entrepreneurs don’t actually struggle with ideas — they struggle with elimination. If you constantly feel like: You could build five different futuresEvery option feels viableYou’re busy but not compoundingYou’re refining instead of cutting This episode explains why. Drawing on insights from 10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Benjamin Hardy — one of the few books that genuinely rewired how she thinks — Jess explores why 10x growth doesn’t come from adding more effort, but from removing what divides your focus. Inside this episode, you’ll learn: Why optionality feels strategic but often creates stagnationThe difference between 2x (additive) thinking and 10x (elimination) thinkingHow being “good at everything” can dilute momentumWhy you can hold multiple skills but not multiple centers of gravityThe emotional cost of misaligned positioning Jess also shares: Her shift from being positioned as an integrator/operator to intentionally building a speaking-centered brandHow she re-centered her identity without burning down existing skillsA behind-the-scenes look at I Love Coaching and what changed when multiple verticals were eliminated in favor of one executable model The Practical Strategy: Subtraction in ActionIf clarity is a subtraction problem, what does that actually look like? Jess breaks it down into four tactical moves: The 30-Day Anchor Choose one declared center of gravity for the next 30 days.Everything else either feeds it — or pauses. Identity Realignment Write down how you currently introduce yourself.Then write down who you are becoming.If they don’t match, you are reinforcing the wrong center. Calendar Audit Time reveals truth.If your calendar does not reflect your declared center, you are not unclear — you are unsubtracted. The Active Kill List Identify three “good” initiatives that are not primary.Choose one to intentionally pause for 30 days.Subtraction creates space. Space creates force. Force creates momentum. Key TakeawaysNothing compounds until something else gets cut.You don’t feel unclear. You feel overextended.Optionality feels powerful, but it often prevents concentration.Clarity emerges when noise is removed. ResourcesIf this episode resonated, explore tools and frameworks built specifically for fast thinkers at: Visit BigIdeasMadeSimple.com10X is Easier than 2x - Dan Sullivan & Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    16 min.
  9. 16. FEB.

    Done Is Louder Than Perfect

    Perfection isn’t excellence. It’s protection. In this episode of Big Ideas Made Simple, Jess challenges the instinct fast thinkers have to over-refine before they ship—and explains why clarity doesn’t precede exposure. It follows it. If you’ve been sitting on an idea because it isn’t “ready,” this episode is your nudge to move. Full Show NotesPerfection feels responsible. It feels strategic. It feels high-standard. But most of the time, it’s protection. In this episode, Jess explores why fast thinkers don’t delay because they’re lazy—they delay because they don’t want to be misunderstood. You’ll learn: Why perfection is often identity protectionThe difference between development and delayWhy clarity follows exposure—not isolationHow hidden work creates silenceThe 80% rule for momentum Jess also shares: Why this podcast sat unpublished for over a yearHow “being categorized wrong” can stall progressWhy 80% shipped creates signal—and 100% hidden creates nothingThe three rules for escaping perfection loops The Three ShiftsThe 80% Rule – If it’s clear, honest, and useful, ship it.The Exposure Rule – If no one has seen it in 24 hours, you’re hiding.The Version Rule – Everything is Version 1. Build momentum, not monuments. Done creates signal. Signal creates clarity. Clarity creates confidence. Confidence creates scale. You can’t reverse the order. Reflection QuestionWhat are you over-refining right now that actually just needs exposure? Resources MentionedBuy Back Your Time – Dan MartellBigIdeasMadeSimple.com

    16 min.

Om

Big Ideas Made Simple is for fast thinkers who are tired of hiding behind hustle and perfection. Hosted by Jess Webber, this show challenges socially acceptable habits like busyness, over-refining, and endless optimization—and replaces them with clear frameworks that create traction. This is not a productivity podcast. It’s a decision-making podcast. If you generate ideas easily but struggle to commit, contain, or ship them, this show will help you turn intelligence into visible impact.