Why visualising success might be sabotaging you, with Nir Eyal (Part 2) episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 18, 2026 · 23 MIN

Why visualising success might be sabotaging you, with Nir Eyal (Part 2)

from How I Work · host Amantha Imber

Visualising success feels productive. Vision boards, manifesting, picturing the finish line. It gives the sense that you’re moving closer to the goal.  But according to the research, that mental shortcut might actually be working against you.  In Part 2 of this two-parter (listen to Part 1 here), I continue my conversation with behavioural scientist and author Nir Eyal to unpack why. Nir spent six years researching how beliefs shape what we see, feel, and do, and why the stories we tell ourselves can dramatically change our behaviour.  We talk about the surprising power of “failure goals”, why lucky people often manufacture their own luck, and how leaders shape behaviour through the invisible simulations they create at work. Nir also explains why framing matters more than many leaders realise, and why the way you interpret discomfort can completely change how you perform.  And when it comes to visualisation, Nir shares a key insight from elite sport. High-performing athletes aren’t picturing themselves standing on the podium. They’re visualising the moment things get hard, and exactly what they’ll do next.  Nir and I discuss:  Why setting a failure goal can actually increase your chances of success  The study that shows why some people experience themselves as “lucky”  How beliefs shape what we see, feel, and do in everyday life  Why leaders are effectively designing simulations through workplace culture  The powerful role of framing when introducing ideas to teams  The “believe, anticipate, feel, confirm” loop that shapes our experiences  How expectations influence the way we experience products and brands  Why visualising the finish line can reduce motivation  What high-performing athletes actually visualise when preparing to succeed    Key quotes  “Failure without learning is a different story. But as long as you are failing and learning, that is progress.”   “Athletes aren’t visualising the trophy. They’re visualising the obstacles in their way.”   Connect with Nir Eyal on Instagram, X (Twitter), and LinkedIn and his website and check out his latest book Beyond Belief.    My latest book The Health Habit is out now. You can order a copy here: https://www.amantha.com/the-health-habit/  Connect with me on the socials: Linkedin (https://www.linkedin.com/in/amanthaimber)  Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/amanthai)  If you are looking for more tips to improve the way you work and live, I write a weekly newsletter where I share practical and simple to apply tips to improve your life. You can sign up for that at https://amantha-imber.ck.page/subscribe  Visit https://www.amantha.com/podcast for full show notes from all episodes.  Get in touch at [email protected]  Credits: Host: Amantha Imber Sound Engineer: The Podcast Butler See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Why visualising success might be sabotaging you, with Nir Eyal (Part 2)

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This episode was published on March 18, 2026.

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Visualising success feels productive. Vision boards, manifesting, picturing the finish line. It gives the sense that you’re moving closer to the goal.  But according to the research, that mental shortcut might actually be working against you. ...

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