Why You Need Both Curiosity and Action to Thrive

Arpit Bhayani

curious, tinkerer, and explorer


I keep screaming, that you need both curiosity and a high bias for action to make an impact. But what does that really mean and why does it matter? Let’s break it down combinatorially :)

  1. Neither Curiosity nor Bias for Action - Stagnation

This is the absolute worst case. No curiosity means no learning. No action means no execution. This way, you stay stuck with no growth, no relevance, just fading into the background.

  1. Curiosity without Bias for Action - Analysis Paralysis

Because you are curious, you will ask great questions, dive deep into concepts, and accumulate knowledge. But without action, it’s all theoretical. Because you have been learning a lot, overthinking kicks in, procrastination follows, and nothing gets built.

Many brilliant minds fall into this trap - they understand problems deeply but never take the steps to solve them. This also leads to frustration and you start to build a negative outlook towards life and others.

  1. Bias for Action without Curiosity - Thoughtless Execution

You move fast but without questioning whether you’re moving in the right direction or are taking the shorter path or not. That means inefficiencies, repeated mistakes, and wasted effort. You are effectively working hard, but not smart.

  1. Curiosity and a High Bias for Action - Impact

This is where the magic happens. Curiosity helps you learn and innovate, while a high bias for action turns those insights into reality. You prototype, experiment, and iterate quickly.

I’ve seen this firsthand - some of the best ideas I’ve had only became impactful because I acted on them sooner; and some of my biggest mistakes? Moving fast without questioning enough.

The world doesn’t reward just thinkers or just doers - it rewards those who learn fast and act faster.

Arpit Bhayani

Creator of DiceDB, Staff Engg at Google Ads and Dataproc, ex-Amazon Fast Data, ex-Director of Engg. SRE and Data Engineering at Unacademy. I spark engineering curiosity through my no-fluff engineering videos on YouTube and my courses


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