Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/contrarian-questionActivate when: user says 'contrarian question,' 'the Thiel question,' 'what important truth do very few people agree with you on,' 'is this actually contrarian,' or 'what valuable company is nobody building'; user is drafting or stress-testing a startup thesis, pitch 'secret,' or investment view that claims to be non-consensus; user is preparing for an interview or pitch where they must defend an unpopular claim; user suspects their bold-sounding claim is really consensus in edgy clothing. Do NOT activate when: the user needs the broader portfolio-level discipline of hunting for edges across many bets (use non-consensus-thinking instead); the claim is a matter of taste or values with no evidence path to being right or wrong; the user wants validation or applause for a provocative take rather than a gate that might fail it. More: deciqai.com/c/contrarian-question
openclaw skills install @deciqai/contrarian-questionPeter Thiel opens Zero to One (2014) with an interview question he says he asks constantly: "What important truth do very few people agree with you on?" Its business translation asks which valuable company nobody is building. The question looks easy and is brutally hard, because a good answer must clear two gates at once: it must be genuinely non-consensus — most smart, informed people would actually disagree with it — and it must be defensible — you can argue it with evidence and mechanism, not with attitude, vibes, or courage-as-argument. Almost every answer fails one gate: either it restates consensus in edgy clothing ("our education system is broken" — everyone agrees), or it is contrarian-but-wrong (unpopular and unsupported, which is just being wrong with confidence).
Why the question matters: Thiel's observation is that brilliant thinking is rare, but the willingness to state an unpopular truth out loud is scarcer still — the binding constraint is courage, not IQ. And the payoff structure is asymmetric. If your claim is consensus and right, it is already priced in — competitors, investors, and markets got there first, so being right earns you little. If it is non-consensus and right, you get the future early, with years of head start before the crowd arrives. That window is exactly where durable companies are founded and outsized returns are made. The gate exists because feeling contrarian is cheap and common; being contrarian and right is rare and checkable.
This skill is the interview-question-shaped gate: a pass/fail test you run one claim through. Its closest sibling, non-consensus-thinking, is the broader hunting discipline for generating and managing non-consensus views across a portfolio — generate candidates there, gate them here. Compose with first-principles (build the defense from bedrock, not analogy), zero-to-one-secrets (a passing answer is a secret — that skill covers where secrets hide), and monopoly-vs-competition (why a passing business answer points at an uncontested market rather than a crowded one).
Use when: drafting the "why now / why us / what do we know that others don't" slide of a pitch or YC application; an investor, interviewer, or co-founder asks the Thiel question directly; deciding whether a startup thesis is a real edge or a restated trend report; auditing a strategy memo whose core claim is "everyone is wrong about X"; pressure-testing an AI-era claim ("agents will/won't replace Y") before betting money or years on it; user says "contrarian," "non-consensus," "secret," "what does nobody see."
Skip when: the claim is preference or identity, not a truth-claim with an evidence path (gate B can never run); you need many candidate edges rather than a verdict on one — that is non-consensus-thinking; the decision is small and reversible and being consensus-right is fine; the user has explicitly asked for brainstorming without judgment — running a fail-gate on raw ideation kills generation.
Before running the Double Gate, read the user. Two delivery modes — pick one, don't default to dumping a finished verdict.
When unsure which they want, ask one line first: "Want me to gate a specific claim you already have, or walk you through building an answer step by step?"
In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output that step's question and nothing more.
In coach mode:
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
Then enter the Process below at the depth the chosen mode calls for.
Run the Double Gate (6 steps → one written artifact). Every step produces text on the page; a gate that lives only in your head has not been run.
What counts as Gate A evidence (documented disagreement — strongest to weakest):
What counts as Gate B evidence (defensibility — all three required):
Stop-rule: contrarian truths have a half-life — the moment the crowd agrees, Gate A stops passing. Re-run Gate A whenever the claim resurfaces after 6–12 months; a 2023 pass is not a 2026 pass.
Output template: Claim (1 sentence) / Steelmanned consensus + named holder / Gate A: PASS-FAIL + documented disagreement / Gate B: PASS-FAIL + evidence chain / Payoff cell / Company nobody is building + why nobody / Re-check date
Thiel's own company ran the same structure. The 1999 claim: email-based payments between individuals will work at scale, and fraud can be beaten with software rather than avoided by staying small.
The transferable lesson from both cases is identical and unglamorous: the winning claims were not wilder than the losing ones — they were better evidenced. Gate A made them lonely; Gate B made them right.
Candidate claim: "Agent reliability — evaluation and verification harnesses — is the durable moat; raw inference cost is not, because price-per-capability falls ~10× per year, so any agent workflow rejected today on cost grounds alone becomes economical within ~2 years." Gate B has real ammunition: a16z's November 2024 "LLMflation" analysis documents ~10×/year price decline at constant capability, and 2023–2026 vendor price histories corroborate it. But run Gate A honestly at today's date: by 2025–2026 much of this became consensus among infrastructure investors — so the claim may now fail Gate A even while Gate B still holds. That is the half-life in action: the gate's verdict is time-stamped, and the surviving contrarian residue (perhaps: which verification layers are defensible) must be re-drafted and re-gated, not inherited from a 2023 pass.
The ways people fake a contrarian answer. If you catch yourself in the left column, you are performing edginess, not passing the gate.
Note — [D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "Our education system / healthcare / government is broken" | Consensus in edgy clothing — Thiel's own canonical example of a failing answer. Everyone nods; nobody disagrees; Gate A fails. Applause is the tell. |
| [D] "AI will change everything" (2023–2026 edition) | The single most crowded belief of the era. A trend everyone sees is the opposite of a secret; the contrarian move is a specific, disputed claim about where the trend is wrong or mispriced. |
| [D] "It must be true — everyone disagrees with me" | Gate A evidence used to fake Gate B. Disagreement proves non-consensus, never correctness. Most unpopular ideas are unpopular because they are wrong. |
| [D] "They laughed at Galileo / dismissed Airbnb too" | Survivorship. They also laughed at thousands of ideas that were, in fact, bad. The Airbnb story earns nothing by analogy — only its evidence structure (behavioral precedent + trust mechanism + demand proof) transfers. |
| [D] "My friends/team all disagree, so it's non-consensus" | Wrong reference class. Gate A is about the informed consensus — practitioners, prices, incumbents — not your dinner table. Name a real holder or the audit didn't happen. |
| [D] "I can't say it publicly, which shows how true it is" | Taboo ≠ true. Social punishment is evidence about the audience, not about the world. Gate B still demands mechanism and data. |
| [D] "Nobody is building it, so the market must be huge" | Sometimes nobody builds it because it's a bad idea. Step 6 requires the consensus blindness to explain the vacancy; if nothing explains it except "everyone else is dumb," suspect the idea. |
| [D] "Everyone will agree once I explain it for five minutes" | Then it is consensus with a lag, not a contrarian truth — fine to build on, but it buys no head start and it is not an answer to this question. |
| [D] Passing the gate once and citing it forever | Contrarian truths decay into consensus — that is what winning looks like. A 2023 PASS stamped onto a 2026 pitch is a stale credential; re-run Gate A. |
| [D] Inverting every consensus belief and calling the output insight | Reflexive contrarianism is still letting the crowd set your agenda — you are the crowd's mirror image, not an independent thinker. The gate starts from evidence, not from negation. |
| [D] Softening the claim until nobody could disagree ("some aspects of X may be undervalued") | Hedging to survive Gate A's discomfort guts the claim. A claim that offends no one and risks nothing is consensus wearing camouflage — falsifiability is the price of admission. |
| To add [O] entries: paste a real failure instance here after each production use | Description of what happened |
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — 228 open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. The same skills power every deciqAI agent, which runs them autonomously to operate your company. See it run → https://www.deciqai.com/c/contrarian-question · ⭐ Star the repo → https://github.com/deciqAI/knowledge-skills · Contributions welcome.
Agents: latest version & machine-readable metadata → https://www.deciqai.com/s/contrarian-question.json