I Admit It. I Have No Idea What I'm Doing. (And That's a Good Thing.) When starting up, it's OK if you don't know what you're doing some of the time. Here's why you should always keep an open mind and keep learning.

By Joel Gascoigne

This story originally appeared on Buffer

During the journey of building Buffer, I've had some truly fantastic moments. I've reached some defining milestones. New doors have opened for me, and it has been great.

Looking back to when I started Buffer, even though I had learned a lot from my past startup experiences, I truly didn't know what I was doing and I approached everything with that mindset. I was out there to learn and I knew that the only way I was going to progress was to adopt a very open mind.

I'm writing this post because when I stray away from this mindset, I lose out as a result.

Related: 5 Unusual Ways to Start Working Smarter, Not Harder

When success can lead you down the wrong path

I've been lucky enough to receive some great press and praise for Buffer. In addition to this, I've had some of my blog posts featured in great newsletters and some blogs I truly admire, and I've also had the opportunity to speak a few times about how I've achieved some success with Buffer.

This form of others directly or indirectly appreciating what I was doing, and a few reaching out to ask me for advice, set me off on a path which I can now say in hindsight is not where I want to be. I love to help others, and I will always do my best to share my own experience, but as soon as I took appreciation as a signal that I knew what I was doing, I had taken a wrong step.

Believing that I knew what I was doing

The key turning point was when I started to believe that I knew what I was doing. I let the comments, the kind congratulations and the small successes affect my mind. I actually thought I knew what I was doing.

As soon as I believed that I knew what I was doing, without realising it, the style of my writing and communication in general started to change slightly. I became naturally drawn to instructive comments and advice where I would have previously communicated simply based on my own experiences.

Related: How to Name Your Startup

The biggest mistake: I became less open-minded

It was with this new instructive style that made me realise I had lost my open-mindedness. After a few people asked for my advice, I was starting to treat everything in a way in which I needed to have a definite answer.

That's when I looked back to the early days of Buffer. At that time, the only way I was going to get somewhere was to be completely open-minded, take every opportunity to learn and make the most of every conversation. This was how I progressed, and it really worked. It felt amazing.

A new start: a beginner's mind

So the truth is: I have no idea what I am doing. I am taking a leaf from Mary Jaksch of Goodlife Zen. I am going to let go of being an expert:

We are all experts. Experts in our job, in raising children, in crossing the road, in signing our name. It's difficult to let go of being an expert. Because it means confessing that we really know nothing. What we know belongs to the past. Whereas this moment now is new and offers its unique challenges. If I let go of being an expert, I can listen to others with an open mind. Then I can find that even a beginner has something to teach me."

The counter point

This is a challenging subject, because I think it is just as easy to be stalled by "I don't know" as it is to let "I know" cause you to become less open-minded. I now think there is a middle ground I want to strive for, which is having a curious and inquisitive mind whilst still acting when I don't know what the outcome will be.

Related: The Science Behind Why Small Teams Work More Productively

Joel is the founder and CEO at Buffer. He is focused on the lean startup approach, user happiness, transparency & company culture.

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