Second-Order Thinking is the practice of asking: “And then what?”
Most people stop at the first consequence of a decision. Second-order thinkers go further — they analyze the consequences of the consequences.
First-order thinking is fast and easy. It sees the immediate result.
Second-order thinking is slower and deeper. It sees what happens next, and what happens after that.
The gap between average decisions and great decisions is almost always found at the second order.