**The Career Framework That Prevents Expensive Mistakes (And When to Ignore It)**
**TITLE TAG:** Circle of Competence for Executives | Adnan Menderes Obuz Menderes Obuz
**META DESCRIPTION:** Master the mental model that defines where you have true expertise and where you’re guessing. Learn when to stay inside your circle and when to expand it strategically.
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I once watched a brilliant software architect lose $180,000 in six months.
Not through bad code. Through stock picks.
He’d built systems serving millions of users, led teams through complex migrations, and consistently delivered projects others said were impossible. But when a friend at a barbecue mentioned a “can’t-miss biotech opportunity,” he convinced himself that intelligence transfers across domains.
It doesn’t.
This wasn’t stupidity—it was a violation of one of the most powerful mental models I’ve encountered in twenty years of consulting: the circle of competence. Understanding where you have genuine expertise versus where you’re simply guessing has saved my clients millions in avoided mistakes and transformed how executives approach career decisions, strategic investments, and leadership challenges.
More importantly, it’s helped me navigate my own career across capital markets, AI strategy, and organizational transformation without the costly detours that derail most generalists.
## What Your Circle of Competence Actually Is
The circle of competence is a brutally honest assessment of where you possess deep, reliable knowledge versus where you’re operating on surface understanding, borrowed opinions, or dangerous overconfidence.
Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger popularized this framework in investing, but its implications extend far beyond portfolio management. Buffett famously said: “What an investor needs is the ability to correctly evaluate selected businesses. You don’t have to be an expert on every company, or even many. You only have to be able to evaluate companies within your circle of competence. The size of that circle is not very important; knowing its boundaries, however, is vital.”
I’ve adapted this for executive decision-making with a more precise definition:
**Your circle of competence contains domains where:**
1. You can make accurate predictions about outcomes
2. You understand second and third-order consequences of decisions
3. You recognize patterns others miss because of accumulated experience
4. You know what you don’t know (can identify knowledge gaps)
5. You’ve paid tuition through real mistakes and integrated those lessons
**Outside your circle, you:**
1. Rely on borrowed frameworks without visceral understanding
2. Can’t distinguish good advice from plausible-sounding nonsense
3. Underestimate complexity and overestimate your judgment
4. Don’t know what questions to ask
5. Haven’t experienced the failure modes that build real expertise
The software architect knew systems architecture deeply—that was inside his circle. He thought pattern recognition and analytical thinking would transfer to biotech investing. They didn’t. He couldn’t evaluate management teams, assess clinical trial data, understand regulatory pathways, or recognize when analysts were selling stories versus substance.
## Why Smart People Consistently Misjudge Their Circles
Over the years, I’ve identified three cognitive traps that cause even exceptional executives to operate outside their competence:
**The Intelligence Illusion:** High-performing professionals assume intelligence is domain-general. You’re smart in one area, therefore you’ll be smart in others with a bit of reading. This is catastrophically wrong.
I learned this during my transition from capital markets into AI strategy consulting. I’d spent fifteen years analyzing financial systems, understanding risk, reading market dynamics. When clients started asking about AI implementation, I initially thought: “How different can it be? Systems are systems.”
Very different, it turns out.
Financial systems have established rules, regulatory frameworks, and decades of pattern data. AI systems in 2024-2026 involve rapidly evolving technology, uncertain regulatory environments, organizational change dynamics I hadn’t navigated, and technical depth I didn’t possess. My first two AI strategy recommendations were mediocre because I was opining from outside my circle while pretending to be inside it.
I had to spend two years deliberately building competence—taking courses, working with technical teams, making small mistakes on lower-stakes projects, and studying failures—before my AI strategy advice became genuinely valuable rather than repackaged conventional wisdom.
**The Confidence Gradient Problem:** As you move from the center of your competence toward its edges, confidence declines gradually while actual knowledge drops off precipitously. This gradient mismatch causes the most expensive mistakes.
Think of it as a fog of war problem. At your competence center, you see clearly. At the edges, visibility decreases slowly. But your actual predictive accuracy doesn’t decline linearly—it often falls off a cliff at the boundary. You feel 70% confident when you should feel 20% confident.
I saw this with a Chief Marketing Officer who expanded from B2C marketing (deep expertise) into B2B enterprise sales (edge of circle). She felt reasonably confident—”selling is selling, right?” Her B2C instincts (quick decision cycles, emotional triggers, viral mechanisms) were worse than useless in complex B2B sales with 18-month cycles and consensus-based buying. The campaign failed expensively before she recognized she’d crossed her boundary.
**The Credentials Trap:** Titles, degrees, and past success create social permission to opine on anything. The more senior you become, the more people assume your judgment transfers across domains.
It doesn’t, but the social reinforcement makes it hard to maintain boundaries.
I consult with executives who get invited to speak on panels, write articles, and advise on topics outside their true expertise simply because they’re successful in their primary domain. The pressure to have opinions on everything—from cryptocurrency to geopolitics to management theory—is intense. Admitting “that’s outside my circle” feels like weakness.
It’s actually wisdom.
## A Framework for Mapping Your Circle
I’ve developed a practical exercise I use with executive coaching clients. It takes about 90 minutes and provides clarity that shapes decisions for years:
**Step 1: List Your Claimed Competencies**
Write down every domain where you give advice, make decisions, or hold strong opinions. Include both professional areas and personal interests where you consider yourself knowledgeable.
Be comprehensive: technical skills, industry knowledge, functional expertise, leadership capabilities, market understanding, even hobbies where you think you have above-average knowledge.
**Step 2: Apply the Prediction Test**
For each domain, answer: “Can I make specific, falsifiable predictions about outcomes that prove accurate more often than educated guesses?”
Inside your circle: “I can predict that migrating this system to microservices will take 40% longer than the technical team estimates because I’ve seen this pattern fifteen times, and the organizational change management always creates unexpected delays.”
Outside your circle: “I think blockchain will revolutionize supply chains” (based on articles you’ve read, not systems you’ve built or failures you’ve studied).
**Step 3: Apply the Costly Mistake Test**
Have you made expensive mistakes in this domain and integrated those lessons?
Real competence is built on scar tissue. If you haven’t paid tuition through real failure, you probably don’t possess deep knowledge—you possess theoretical understanding or borrowed wisdom.
I include “costly” broadly: time wasted, relationships damaged, money lost, opportunities missed, reputation hurt. The software architect hadn’t lost money in biotech before his big bet. He had no scar tissue to guide his judgment.
**Step 4: Apply the Unknown Unknowns Test**
Can you articulate what you don’t know in this domain?
Inside your circle, you have a mental map of the knowledge landscape. You know which areas remain mysterious, which require specialists, which are genuinely uncertain versus simply unknown to you.
Outside your circle, you don’t even know what questions to ask. Everything looks simpler than it is.
**Step 5: Draw the Boundary**
Based on these tests, draw a literal circle (I use a Venn diagram with concentric rings):
– **Core competence:** Deep expertise, proven track record, costly lessons integrated
– **Adjacent competence:** Growing expertise, some battle scars, can contribute meaningfully with humility
– **Informed interest:** You understand enough to ask good questions and evaluate expert advice, but shouldn’t make independent decisions
– **Outside:** You’re a novice with opinions, not expertise
Most executives are shocked by how small their true core competence circle is. That’s healthy shock.
## When to Stay Inside Your Circle
The default answer to “Should I stay inside my circle of competence?” is yes. Here’s why:
**Resource Efficiency:** Building genuine expertise takes thousands of hours. Staying focused multiplies your return on that investment rather than diluting it.
I’ve watched executives spread themselves across five “competency areas” and become mediocre in all of them. The executive who goes deep in two areas becomes genuinely world-class and dramatically more valuable.
**Reputation Compounding:** Being known for deep expertise in a specific domain creates compounding opportunities. Speaking engagements lead to consulting work leads to board positions leads to venture capital advisory—all because you’re recognized as the expert in X.
Being known as a smart generalist who has opinions on everything creates shallow opportunities that don’t compound.
**Avoiding Expensive Mistakes:** This is the most practical benefit. Every time I’ve made a significant professional or investment mistake in my career, I can trace it to operating outside my circle while pretending I was inside it.
Three years ago, I almost invested in a restaurant concept. The pitch was compelling, the founders were impressive, and I convinced myself that “business fundamentals are business fundamentals.” A friend whose circle includes hospitality asked me three questions I couldn’t answer about unit economics, real estate dynamics, and labor cost structures. I withdrew.
That restaurant closed within eighteen months. Staying inside my circle saved me six figures.
**Decision Quality Under Pressure:** When markets crash, organizations face crisis, or careers hit inflection points, you need reliable judgment. That only exists inside your circle.
Outside your circle, you’re guessing with confidence. Inside your circle, you have intuition built on pattern recognition from dozens or hundreds of similar situations.
## When to Deliberately Expand Your Circle
Here’s the paradox: Staying inside your circle maximizes performance. But circles that don’t expand eventually become traps.
I’ve identified four scenarios where deliberate circle expansion is strategic:
**Scenario 1: Your Domain Is Becoming Obsolete**
Technology, regulation, or market shifts can hollow out entire competency domains. If your circle is shrinking in relevance, you must expand into adjacent territory.
I watched this with executives in traditional financial analysis roles as AI-driven analytics automated significant portions of their expertise. Those who recognized the shift early and deliberately expanded their circles to include AI tool evaluation, human-AI workflow design, and judgment-required analysis thrived. Those who defended their existing circle became progressively less relevant.
The key: Expand into adjacencies with transferable elements, not completely foreign domains. A financial analyst moving into AI-augmented analysis leverages domain knowledge while adding new tools. The same analyst deciding to become a social media influencer would be leaping outside their circle entirely.
**Scenario 2: Your Strategic Goals Require New Capabilities**
If you’re targeting a C-suite role, board position, or entrepreneurial venture, you may need competencies you don’t currently possess.
When I transitioned from capital markets specialist to broader AI strategy consultant, I had to deliberately expand my circle. But I did it methodically:
– Started with small, low-stakes client projects where mistakes were recoverable
– Found mentors who were inside the circle I was entering
– Spent two years studying intensively before claiming expertise publicly
– Remained transparent about my learning curve with clients
– Priced early work below market to reflect my developing competence
This is expansion as investment, not expansion as overreach.
**Scenario 3: Building Combinatorial Advantage**
Sometimes the most valuable expertise exists at the intersection of two domains. If you have deep knowledge in Area A and can build genuine competence in Area B, that combination may create unique value.
My own positioning—capital markets + AI strategy—emerged from deliberate circle expansion. Few capital markets specialists understand AI implementation deeply. Few AI strategists understand financial system dynamics and risk. The intersection creates advisory opportunities neither pure specialist can address.
But this only works if you actually build competence in the second domain. Surface knowledge plus deep expertise equals diluted value, not combinatorial advantage.
**Scenario 4: Intellectual Curiosity Aligned With Long-Term Bets**
Sometimes you expand your circle simply because a domain fascinates you and you’re willing to invest years building expertise for intrinsic reasons, not immediate payoff.
I’ve spent the last three years studying longevity research and metabolic health. It’s outside my professional circle, but the intellectual challenge compels me and I’m making a long-term bet that healthspan optimization will become increasingly central to executive performance.
I’m not claiming expertise yet. I’m deliberately building it through study, experimentation on myself, consultation with specialists, and integration of costly mistakes (failed nutrition experiments, ineffective protocols). Maybe in five years it enters my professional circle. Maybe it remains personal interest. Either way, the expansion is intentional, not casual.
## How AI Is Reshaping the Circle of Competence
We’re entering a period where the very concept of professional competence is being redefined. Three dynamics are reshaping what belongs inside versus outside your circle:
**AI Is Democratizing Surface Competence**
Tasks that required years of training—basic coding, financial modeling, market research, content creation—are becoming accessible to anyone with AI tools. The “circle of competence” for these domains is expanding universally, which paradoxically makes deep expertise more valuable.
What remains inside your circle in 2026 and beyond:
– Judgment on ambiguous problems where the framing itself is uncertain
– Pattern recognition from experience across dozens of failure modes
– Relationship and trust-building that AI can’t replicate
– Strategic taste developed through scar tissue
– Integration of multiple domains where AI lacks context
What’s moving outside everyone’s exclusive circle:
– Rote knowledge AI can retrieve instantly
– Standardized analysis AI can perform reliably
– Pattern-matching in well-defined domains
– Execution of clearly specified tasks
**The Advantage Is Shifting to Polymath-Specialists**
The executives I’m seeing succeed most in AI-augmented environments aren’t pure specialists or pure generalists. They’re what I call “polymath-specialists”—deep expertise in 2-3 domains with AI-augmented breadth everywhere else.
You maintain a core circle of genuine competence where your judgment is irreplaceable. You use AI to extend into adjacent areas with informed competence rather than dangerous incompetence. You know the boundaries clearly.
**Circle Expansion Is Accelerating**
With AI as a learning partner, the time required to expand your circle is compressing. What took me two years of deliberate study to move from capital markets into AI strategy might take 12-18 months for someone starting today with access to specialized AI tutors, simulation environments, and instant expertise access.
But—and this is critical—the shortcut is in information access, not in building intuition. You still need to make mistakes, integrate lessons, and develop pattern recognition through real stakes. AI can accelerate learning but can’t replace experience-based wisdom.
## Practical Application: Using This Framework This Month
You don’t need to map your entire competence landscape immediately. Start with these practices:
**Before your next major decision:**
Ask explicitly: “Is this inside my circle of competence?” If no, identify whose circle it’s in and seek their counsel. If you proceed anyway, acknowledge you’re making a bet outside your expertise and size it accordingly.
The software architect’s mistake wasn’t investing in biotech—it was betting $180K while outside his circle. A $5K experimental investment while explicitly acknowledging limited competence would have been tuition, not catastrophe.
**In your next performance review or career planning session:**
Map your core competence explicitly. Identify:
– Where you’re genuinely world-class (worthy of premium compensation)
– Where you’re solid but not distinctive (competent but commoditizable)
– Where you’re operating on confidence rather than competence (danger zone)
– Where you want to deliberately expand over the next 2-3 years
This clarity transforms career decisions. Pursue opportunities that leverage your core. Decline opportunities that require you to operate outside your circle unless you’re committed to years of competence-building.
**Develop your “I don’t know” muscle:**
Practice saying “That’s outside my circle of competence” in low-stakes situations. Notice how rarely most executives admit knowledge boundaries.
I’ve started tracking this in meetings. When topics arise outside my expertise, I explicitly say: “I don’t have deep enough knowledge in this domain to offer reliable judgment. Here’s what I’d need to learn to develop competence, and here’s who I’d consult who is inside their circle here.
This admission hasn’t cost me credibility. It’s enhanced it. Clients trust my judgment more in areas where I do claim expertise because they know I’m willing to admit limits.
**Create a “circle expansion project”:**
If you’ve identified a strategic domain to expand into, treat it like a project with milestones:
– 3 months: Foundational reading, identify experts to learn from
– 6 months: Small experimental applications, initial mistakes
– 12 months: Medium-stakes projects with mentorship
– 24 months: Independent capability with continuing humility
Don’t claim expertise before you’ve earned it. Don’t avoid expansion when it’s strategic.
## The Paradox of Mastery
Here’s what two decades of working with executives has taught me, Adnan Menderes Obuz Menderes Obuz: The most confident professionals are often those with the smallest circles who know their boundaries precisely.
The anxious, defensive professionals are often those with fuzzy boundaries who secretly fear they’re outside their competence but can’t admit it.
True mastery isn’t knowing everything. It’s knowing exactly what you know deeply, what you understand partially, and what you’re simply guessing about.
That software architect who lost $180K? He’s now one of the most thoughtful investors I know—in software companies. He rebuilt his investment approach entirely within his circle: He invests in technologies he understands, business models he’s operated, teams he can evaluate based on engineering culture patterns he recognizes.
His returns in that narrow domain significantly outperform the market. His returns outside it were disastrous.
The lesson isn’t “never invest outside your domain.” It’s “know when you’re inside versus outside your circle, and adjust your confidence, stake size, and decision process accordingly.”
For executives navigating increasingly complex career landscapes, AI transformation, and strategic decisions with compounding consequences, this mental model might be the most valuable twenty minutes of thinking you invest this year.
Draw your circle. Know your boundaries. Expand deliberately. Operate confidently where you have genuine expertise, and humbly everywhere else.
That’s not limitation. That’s wisdom.
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## Frequently Asked Questions
**How do I know if I’m actually inside my circle or just overconfident?**
Apply the falsifiable prediction test: Make specific predictions about outcomes in this domain, write them down with timelines, and track accuracy over time. Inside your circle, you’ll predict correctly 70-80% of the time on non-obvious questions. Outside your circle, you’ll perform barely better than chance (50-60%) while feeling much more confident. I keep a decision journal where I record predictions and review quarterly. The gap between my confidence and my accuracy reveals exactly where my circle boundaries lie. If you’re unwilling to make falsifiable predictions and track them, you’re probably operating on borrowed opinions rather than genuine expertise.
**Should I disclose the limits of my competence to my employer or clients?**
Strategically, yes—but frame it as strength, not weakness. Instead of “I don’t know anything about X,” try “X is outside my current expertise, but here’s how I’d approach building competence” or “For X, we should bring in [specific expert] while I focus on Y and Z where I can deliver exceptional value.” I’ve never lost a client or opportunity by being transparent about competence boundaries. I have lost both by overreaching and delivering mediocre work outside my circle. The executives who rise fastest are those trusted for reliable judgment in their domain, not those who claim expertise everywhere.
**What if my circle of competence is becoming obsolete due to AI or market changes?**
This is the most urgent question for 2026. First, distinguish between your domain becoming obsolete versus certain tasks within it being automated. Often, the judgment-heavy aspects of your expertise become more valuable even as execution becomes automated. Second, map adjacent domains where your transferable skills create advantages—don’t leap to completely foreign territory. Third, start your expansion project now, not when obsolescence is complete. I’m watching financial analysts whose modeling work is being automated; those expanding into AI-augmented analysis and judgment-required strategy are thriving, while those defending pure technical analysis are struggling. Give yourself 18-24 months to build genuine competence in the adjacent space.
**How can I expand my circle while working full-time and managing existing responsibilities?**
Circle expansion requires sustained investment, but it doesn’t require quitting your job. I use a “20% focused expansion” model: Dedicate 20% of professional development time (roughly 8-10 hours per month) to deliberate learning in your target domain. This might mean taking small projects that stretch you into adjacent territory, finding a mentor for monthly conversations, or systematic study with immediate application. The key is consistency over intensity—regular, focused investment compounds. Avoid the trap of spreading that 20% across five domains; concentrate it on one expansion area for 12-24 months. I expanded from capital markets into AI strategy while working full-time by taking increasingly complex AI-related client projects, each one teaching me more than courses ever could.
**Can I operate successfully as a generalist, or does this framework only value specialists?**
The most successful professionals I know are “T-shaped”—deep expertise in 1-2 domains (the vertical stroke) with broad, informed competence across related areas (the horizontal stroke). Pure generalists struggle because they lack competitive advantage; pure specialists become vulnerable to obsolescence. The key is honest self-assessment: Where are you genuinely deep versus where are you broadly informed? Use AI and expert networks to extend your horizontal stroke, but maintain depth in your vertical. My own career spans capital markets, AI strategy, and organizational transformation—but within each, I have specific sub-domains where I’m genuinely expert (capital markets: risk assessment; AI strategy: implementation roadmapping; transformation: executive capability development). Everywhere else, I’m an informed generalist who knows when to call in deeper expertise.
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## About the Author
Adnan Menderes Obuz Menderes Obuz is a Toronto-based consultant specializing in AI strategy, capital markets analysis, and executive leadership development. Over 20 years, he’s guided executives through career transitions, strategic pivots, and the development of genuine expertise in emerging domains. His work focuses on helping leaders build competitive advantages through deep competence rather than surface-level breadth. Adnan Menderes Obuz has consulted across technology, finance, and healthcare sectors, with particular focus on navigating the intersection of AI transformation and human judgment.
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## What’s Your Circle?
I’m curious: What domain do you claim expertise in that you’ve never actually paid tuition through costly mistakes? And what’s one area you’re considering expanding into deliberately?
The most valuable conversations I have with executives start with honest self-assessment. Share your thoughts in the comments—I read and respond to every serious reflection.