"David Epstein manages to make me thoroughly enjoy the experience of being told that everything I thought about something was wrong." —Malcolm Gladwell
What if the conventional wisdom on the best path to success — specialize early, focus narrowly, accumulate ten thousand hours — is not just incomplete, but actively misleading?
In this talk based on his #1 New York Times bestseller "Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World," David Epstein draws on fascinating research across sports, business, science, and the arts to dismantle the myth that early specialization is the key to high performance. It turns out that athletes who sample different sports are more likely to succeed long-term than those who specialize early, and Nobel laureates are about twenty-two times more likely than their peers to have a serious outside hobby. The world's top forecasters aren't deep domain experts, they're intellectual omnivores who draw on many areas of knowledge.
David makes the case that in most fields — especially those that are complex, unpredictable, and difficult to automate — generalists, not specialists, are primed to excel. They often find their path late or juggle many interests rather than locking in on one. They're also more creative, more agile, and better able to make connections their specialized peers can't see. In a world that pushes ever-narrower focus, breadth of experience and the ability to think across boundaries are becoming the most undervalued competitive advantages. As AI takes over more routine specialized tasks, the people who can synthesize across domains become more valuable.
Audiences gain a transformed understanding of what drives high performance, and practical takeaways on how to build more adaptable careers, teams, and organizations.
What if everything we've been told about unlimited freedom and resources leading to greater creativity and success is wrong? In this revelatory talk based on his third book, "Inside the Box: How Constraints Make Us Better," David Epstein dismantles one of the most pervasive myths in work and life: that people are most creative, productive, and satisfied when they're most free. Drawing on fascinating research from cognitive psychology and organizational behavior, David reveals a counterintuitive truth: the right constraints can be the most powerful tools you have for focusing a team, unsticking a project, or even figuring out where to apply your effort. Through case studies that range from startling successes (and devastating failures) in Silicon Valley, to singular athletic feats, to creative breakthroughs spanning Theodor Geisel (aka Dr. Seuss) to Apple, David explains why doing more with less isn't just a cliché, it's a strategy.
Through meticulous research and eclectic examples — from the periodic table to Pixar films — David shows why complexity steals clarity, and why organizations with too much freedom and too few boundaries often fail spectacularly, while those that strategically embrace constraints adapt repeatedly. In an era when AI is removing more constraints than ever — making it easier to produce more, faster, in every direction at once — the ability to design the right boundaries is fast becoming a critical skill.
Audiences walk away with implementable strategies and take- home exercises for identifying the bottlenecks actually limiting their performance, overcoming our hardwired bias to always add more, and designing productive constraints that channel effort where it matters most. Above all, they leave with a fundamental mindset shift: from viewing constraints as obstacles to recognizing them as opportunities to clarify priorities and launch productive exploration.
Artificial intelligence is rapidly automating tasks that once defined expertise, from coding and data analysis to drafting strategy and writing reports. Understandably, people are asking: How can I stay relevant when machines can do what I was trained to do?
In this timely talk, David Epstein, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of "Range," reframes the AI conversation away from tools and toward people. Drawing on decades of research into performance in complex, fast-changing environments, David shows why periods of technological upheaval consistently reward adaptable generalists—people with broad experience, strong judgment, and the ability to connect ideas across domains. Rather than predicting the future of AI, David focuses on what history, data, and organizations already reveal: As technical skills become cheaper and more automated, human skills—context, creativity, communication, synthesis—become more valuable.
From how to foster cross-domain experience to why "side projects" are signals of future readiness, audiences learn how to build careers and teams that thrive with new tools rather than compete against them, and leave with a grounded, evidence- based framework for navigating uncertainty, without hype, fear- mongering, or claims of technological prophecy.
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