Ness Labs: Collective Curiosity 💫 (+ Ephemeral Coaching Program!)


Edition #256 – January 16th, 2025
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A newsletter by Anne-Laure Le Cunff​

Hello friends,

If the past year has taught me anything, it’s that collective curiosity is the driving force behind human progress. It’s what makes us learn from each other, connect the dots, and imagine better ideas. And we can all learn to become beacons of curiosity in our communities.

That’s why I’m so excited to announce The Curiosity Collective, a free bonus coaching program exclusively for early supporters of Tiny Experiments!

We’ll spend four weeks together in February exploring systematic curiosity, mindful productivity, and metacognitive decision-making through practical exercises and group coaching sessions.

This is a truly once-in-a-lifetime learning experience: because of the interactive format, only 300 spots are available for our community of 100,000+ Ness Labs readers, and once the program ends, our ephemeral learning space will dissolve forever.

→ Apply here by Friday, January 31st to secure your spot.

When you’re done, scroll down to read this week’s edition where we’ll explore the benefits of collective curiosity and how to practice and elevate curiosity as a group.

Enjoy the read,
Anne-Laure.

💫 Collective Curiosity

At his school in ancient Athens, Aristotle encouraged everyone to walk through the gardens while discussing ideas, rather than sitting quietly for lectures. Teachers and students would explore questions, challenge each other’s thinking, and build on each other’s insights.

This tradition of walking and wondering together became so successful that it continued for centuries, influencing how knowledge was shared throughout the ancient world.

Yet today we rarely create space for such collective curiosity. While we have unprecedented access to information, we’re often too busy, too distracted, or too preoccupied with immediate results to engage in shared exploration. Plus, our education and workplaces usually prioritize individual achievement over collaborative discovery.

This is unfortunate, as exploring together can lead to remarkable outcomes. When you share your questions with others, you can create new possibilities that none of you could have imagined alone. Let’s explore why this happens and how you can make it work for you.

Beyond Individual Genius

History often paints a romantic picture of the lone genius – the solitary inventor in their workshop, the isolated scientist in their lab, the writer alone in their garret… This narrative is compelling but incomplete: individual brilliance is rarely enough for breakthrough innovation.

The Wright brothers didn’t invent flight in isolation; they extensively corresponded with fellow aviation enthusiasts. The Human Genome Project, which successfully mapped our genetic code, wasn’t the work of a single brilliant mind, but rather a massive collaborative effort where thousands of scientists shared their questions, challenges, and discoveries.

Collective curiosity is the practice of exploring questions and discovering answers together, where we build on each other’s insights and create an environment that encourages open inquiry and shared learning.

When you practice collective curiosity, you will:

• Learn faster. Sharing your learning journey with others creates natural opportunities for feedback and new perspectives. You also gain access to different experiences and resources, helping you grow more quickly than you could alone.

• Reduce confirmation bias. Teams that encourage respectful questioning consistently make better decisions than those that don’t. That’s because collective curiosity naturally encourages us to question each other’s assumptions, which helps everyone identify flaws in their thinking and find better solutions.

• Encourage others to explore. Research shows that seeing others engage with interesting questions makes us more curious ourselves. This creates a positive cycle where one person’s questions inspire others to join the exploration.

• Builds sustainable knowledge. Organizations that encourage people to learn together generate knowledge that stays even when individuals leave. For instance, the Mayo Clinic has maintained its culture of medical innovation for over a century because its doctors and researchers consistently share their questions and insights with each other.

While the benefits of collective curiosity are clear, creating an environment where people feel comfortable exploring together takes some thought and effort. Fortunately, there are practical ways to get started.

How to Wonder Together

Better ideas, stronger relationships, more enjoyable work await… The payoff of collective curiosity is worth the investment. Here are five ways you can start unlocking these benefits:

1. Mapping the unknown. Many breakthroughs start when someone admits “I don’t understand why…” Sit down with your colleagues and explicitly write down what you don’t know or understand about a topic. This turns knowledge gaps into shared opportunities for discovery.

2. Multilevel metacognition. Question your assumptions together as a form of self-anthropology. Have your team trace back their assumptions to their origins. Start with any current practice and ask “Why do we do this?” For each answer, ask “Why do we believe that?” This metacognitive practice helps uncover hidden assumptions that might be limiting better solutions.

3. Wonder walks. Take walks with colleagues where you share what you’re working on and what questions you’re wrestling with. You can try this one-on-one or in small groups. The informal setting and movement often lead to more open conversations and unexpected connections.

4. Tiny experiments. Try a new meeting format for a week or test a different approach with three customers. Keep experiments small enough that failure feels safe – this encourages bolder questions and sometimes the most interesting discoveries come from experiments that don’t work as planned.

5. Learning in public. Start a newsletter about what you’re learning or host “Curiosity Hour” sessions where people share their work in progress. When we openly share our uncertainties, it creates psychological safety for others to do the same. It also creates opportunities for unexpected paths as others can spot patterns you might have missed.

The greatest breakthroughs in human history haven’t come from lone geniuses but from communities of curious minds, each building upon each other’s questions and insights.

When we practice collective curiosity, every conversation becomes a chance to learn something new. So let me ask: which questions will you and your team explore today, together?

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💛 Join the Ness Labs Community

If you enjoy the newsletter, you'll love our community of curious minds growing together through interactive workshops and safe discussion spaces. We’ve created a brand-new showcase page powered by Circle Discover where you can explore everything you’ll have access to:

• Find your Creative Ikigai. Curious about what creative projects might activities align with your passion, mission, profession, and vocation? Join Gosia Fricze on Monday, Jan 20th for a one-hour workshop where you’ll complete a self-reflection exercise to find your creative ikigai.
​• Rapid Coaching with Joe Hudson. Joe's coaching is akin to compressing years of different modalities and therapy into a short session done with love and laser focus. Join this session whether you want to participate or simply observe the process.
​• Make progress on your projects. Our weekly Europe/Americas will be hosted by Joshwin Greene on Jan 19th, followed by our Asia/Oceania session hosted by Javier Luis Gomez on Jan 23rd, with 25-minute Pomodoros and 5-minute breaks.
• Conduct a weekly review. Join Ashley Crouch and Benjamin Covington for our weekly community review to see what worked, what didn't, and what you might want to try next.​
• Master your creative processes.
Join Schäfer for this session to help you figure out where your personal strengths lie within the creative process and the stumbling blocks that might come with them.

All of these and future events are included in the price of the annual membership ($49), as well as access to our courses, recordings of all our previous sessions, and a growing collection of case studies.

Until next week, take care!
Anne-Laure.

P.S. I’m in NYC this week to record the audiobook of Tiny Experiments. Any local events, meetups, podcast hosts I should contact, things I should do, foods I should try... Please hit reply :)

Ness Labs by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

A weekly newsletter with science-based insights on creativity, mindful productivity, better thinking and lifelong learning.

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