‘The New Life’ technique asks you to stop treating your problem like a machine and start treating it like a biological organism. Living things don’t just “function”; they grow, they compete, they cooperate, and they evolve. By applying the laws of biology—natural selection, symbiosis, and adaptation—to your business or project, you can find organic solutions that are far more resilient than mechanical ones.
The Biology of Business
In a mechanical mindset, you “fix” a problem. In a biological mindset, you “evolve” a solution. Machines are rigid; life is fluid. To find a breakthrough, you must imagine your problem as a life form that is trying to find its “ecological niche” in a changing environment.
Define the Organism
Describe your project or problem as a living creature. What are its “vital organs”? What does it eat?
Example: “Our startup is a young mammal in a forest full of predators (competitors). Its vital organ is its ‘core technology.’ It eats ‘user data’ and ‘venture capital’.”
Identify the Environmental Stressors
What is changing in the “ecosystem” that threatens this life form?
- Climate Change: The market is shifting from “growth-at-all-costs” to “profitability.”
- Predators: A giant tech company just entered our niche.
- Scarcity: Ad costs are rising, and “food” (new users) is becoming harder to find.
Evolve an Adaptation
If this were a real animal, how would it evolve to survive?
- Symbiosis: Instead of fighting the giant predator, we form a partnership (symbiosis) where we provide a service they can’t build themselves.
- Camouflage: We niche down so specifically that the big predators don’t even see us as a threat.
- Mutation: We fundamentally change our “DNA” (business model) to thrive on a different kind of food (e.g., switching from B2C to B2B).
Translate to Action
What is the practical version of this biological adaptation?
- Adaptation: Symbiosis.
- Action: Pivot from a standalone app to an API-first service that integrates directly into the giant competitor’s platform.
Practice
Problem: “A dying retail store.” Biological Metaphor: “The store is a plant in a drought (the internet).” How does a plant survive a drought? It grows deeper roots or stores water. What is the retail equivalent?