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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode, Nikola Tangen sits down with Sir David Spiegelhalter, a renowned statistician and risk communication expert, to explore how humans navigate uncertainty and the critical importance of evidence-based decision making. Spiegelhalter reveals why most people claim to dislike uncertainty yet secretly crave it (01:31), discussing how we all say no to knowing our Christmas presents or death dates, demonstrating our complex relationship with the unknown. The conversation takes a sobering turn as he critiques current political discourse, particularly highlighting concerns about vaccine misinformation and policy decisions not grounded in data (02:38). Drawing from his COVID-19 communication experience, Spiegelhalter shares his five essential rules for crisis communication (06:03)—including the crucial principle of admitting what you don't know and promising to update advice as new information emerges. The episode concludes on a deeply personal note as Spiegelhalter discusses his own prostate cancer diagnosis (07:27), revealing the frustrating gaps in survival data even for a world-class statistician trying to understand his own prognosis.
CEO of the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund, one of the world's largest institutional investors managing over $1.7 trillion. As host, he guides discussions on risk and decision-making for high-achieving professionals.
Renowned statistician and risk communication expert, author of multiple acclaimed books on making complex statistics accessible. Former president of the Royal Statistical Society and widely recognized as Britain's leading public communicator of statistical concepts, particularly distinguished for his work during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Never let personal feelings or biases override hard data when making critical choices. As Spiegelhalter emphasizes, high-level discourse breaks down when people ignore evidence in favor of saying "what they feel like saying." (02:26) Build a habit of asking "What does the data actually show?" before forming opinions or making strategic decisions.
When communicating uncertainty or delivering difficult news, follow this sequence: (1) State what you know clearly, (2) Admit what you don't know, (3) Explain what you're doing to learn more, (4) Give people actionable steps they can take now, and (5) Emphasize that your advice will evolve as new information emerges. (06:03) This framework builds trust through transparency rather than false certainty.
Recognize that discomfort with uncertainty is universal, yet successful professionals must operate effectively within it. Most people claim to dislike uncertainty but actually cherish it in many areas of life—they don't want to know Christmas gifts in advance or jump to TV show endings. (01:26) Develop comfort with provisional decision-making and iterative planning.
Replace yes/no thinking with probability-based analysis, especially for high-stakes decisions. When facing complex scenarios like medical treatments or business strategies, demand survival curves and likelihood ranges rather than absolute predictions. (07:24) This approach provides more nuanced and actionable intelligence than false binary certainties.
Maintain clear boundaries between presenting data and recommending actions. During COVID, Spiegelhalter's credibility came from consistently explaining numbers without telling people what policies to pursue. (05:13) This discipline allows you to be trusted as an objective analyst while others can focus on decision-making and implementation.