In the cases we don’t get to decide if something is good, who does instead?
Who gets to leave the product reviews, or the Google rating? Who gets to talk about the product with their friends?
If the answer is somebody else, then the whole idea of “good” was never in our hands to begin with.
Often times, finding “a level of good we’re satisfied with” is what slows us down from making more progress.
The alternative is to be okay with being wrong. Better yet, it’s all we can afford to do when we’re in service for other people.
