For nearly a century, the British cycling team was a complete disaster. Not average. Terrible. From 1908 to 2003, British cyclists won just one gold medal at the Olympics. In 110 years of the Tour de France, not a single British rider had ever won the event. One of Europe’s top bike manufacturers even refused to sell bikes to the British team because they were afraid it would hurt sales. That’s how bad things were. Then a man named Dave Brailsford took over. And instead of making big changes, he became obsessed with something almost laughably small. Tiny improvements. He called it “the aggregation of marginal gains.” Improve everything by just 1%. Not through some quick fix. Just tiny upgrades everywhere possible. The team tested more aerodynamic seat positions. Tire pressure got adjusted. They even looked into which massage gels produced slightly faster muscle recovery. They discovered the best pillows and mattresses for sleep. They taught riders the correct way to wash their hands to avoid getting sick during training. Individually, none of these changes looked impressive. But together? Results followed. Within five years, the British cycling team won most of the available gold medals in cycling at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. A few years later, Bradley Wiggins became the first Brit to ever win the Tour de France. Then Chris Froome won it four more times. The same program that had been a joke suddenly became the benchmark. Not because of a single breakthrough. Because of hundreds of tiny ones. We admire the results. But we almost never see the small habits that quietly created them. That’s exactly why the book Atomic Habits became so popular. James Clear explains that real change usually doesn’t happen through bursts of motivation. It happens through small behaviours repeated consistently long enough to compound. Tiny improvements. The kind that barely seem important today. Until one day the results are hard to argue with. Most people underestimate how much small actions add up when repeated daily. The British cycling team didn’t change their future in one moment. They changed it one tiny improvement at a time. That’s how almost every real change works. If you’ve never read Atomic Habits, it’s worth your time. It’s one of the clearest explanations of how small daily behaviours shape long-term success. You can check it out here: https://go.wm-tips.com/atomic. Regards, P.S. Most people try to change their life in one move. History says that almost never works. Small habits are easier to repeat. And repeated actions are what create permanent change. |
