Good Research

Good research aims for three things: it should matter, be correct, and be easy for others to understand.

1. Pick problems with taste

  • Work on questions that are important, not merely publishable.
  • Optimize for impact, not minimum viable novelty.
  • Look for problems where you have unusual insight or comparative advantage.
  • Read widely so you know the field, then think independently so you are not trapped by its bad habits.
  • Talk to people, find strong collaborators, and share ideas freely. Execution matters more than secrecy.

2. Use taste to find better ideas

  • A strong paper usually starts from a problem that genuinely matters.
  • Prefer projects that only you, or very few people, are well positioned to do.
  • Notice areas where current work feels obviously confused, weak, or incomplete.
  • Accept that luck matters. Good ideas often come from timing, exposure, and chance connections.

3. Execute ruthlessly

  • Start with the part most likely to fail. De-risk early.
  • Kill projects that do not work.
  • Also kill projects that technically work but are unlikely to matter much.
  • Re-prioritize when a much more important idea appears.
  • Put in unreasonable effort on the parts that matter: experiments, controls, evidence, and skeptical checks.
  • Keep one clear central idea. Every experiment should support it.

4. Make the paper feel complete

  • A paper should answer the obvious questions a careful reader will have.
  • Do the most natural extensions if they are essential.
  • Leave only non-essential follow-up work for others.
  • The reader should not finish thinking, “the obvious next test was missing.”

5. Write for humans

  • A paper should communicate one main idea.
  • Know who the reader is and write for that person.
  • The abstract should state the topic, problem, method or result, and why it matters.
  • The introduction should tell a story: where the reader starts, what world the paper lives in, and why the contribution matters.
  • Figures should stand on their own with clear takeaways.
  • The conclusion should answer “so what?” rather than repeat the abstract.

6. Write clearly, not theatrically

  • Clarity matters more than style.
  • Read your writing aloud or use text-to-speech to catch confusion.
  • Be specific, avoid unnecessary jargon, and cut what does not help the message.
  • Good writing is mostly readable writing.

7. After submission, luck still matters

  • A good paper can be too early.
  • A good topic can cool off before publication.
  • Someone else may publish first.
  • Awards depend on reviewers, committees, timing, and taste.

Because of that, do not aim primarily at awards. Aim to consistently produce work with a high-impact distribution. Awards are a noisy sample from that distribution.

Practical summary

  • Choose important problems.
  • Build strong collaborations.
  • Read a lot, then think independently.
  • Test risky assumptions first.
  • Drop weak projects quickly.
  • Focus the paper around one idea.
  • Write so the reader can immediately see why the work matters.

Best paper awards are mostly downstream of doing important, rigorous, well-communicated work, plus timing and luck.