Jeff Bezos's 3 Decisions a Day: The Warren Buffett Method Behind Amazon
Executive Leadership

Jeff Bezos's 3 Decisions a Day: The Warren Buffett Method Behind Amazon

AT
Argumentree Team
Executive Leadership
June 10, 2026
10 min read

Jeff Bezos High-Quality Decisions: What He Learned from Warren Buffett

In September 2018 at the Economic Club of Washington, Jeff Bezos revealed his decision-making philosophy: "As a senior executive, you get paid to make a small number of high-quality decisions. If I make three good decisions a day, that's enough. Warren Buffett says he's good if he makes three good decisions a year." Bezos protects decision quality through deliberate practices: scheduling "high-IQ meetings" for 10am, refusing major decisions after 5pm, prioritizing 8 hours of sleep, and using Amazon's 6-pager memo system to force structured reasoning. On gut decisions, Bezos said: "All of my best decisions have been made with heart, intuition, guts—not analysis." But his gut is trained through documentation: every major Amazon decision is written down with its reasoning, creating institutional memory that feeds future intuition. The loop: preparation → gut decision → documentation → future preparation. Bezos operationalized Warren Buffett's philosophy through Amazon's systems—the 6-pager, silent reading, Type 1/Type 2 decision framework, disagree and commit. The principle: fewer decisions, higher quality, documented reasoning.

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TL;DR

In 2018, Jeff Bezos revealed his decision-making philosophy: "You get paid to make a small number of high-quality decisions." He credits Warren Buffett's "3 decisions a year" approach. But Bezos added something crucial: a system to capture why decisions were made—so documentation becomes tomorrow's preparation.

  • 3 decisions a day — protect cognitive capacity for what matters
  • 10am high-IQ meetings — schedule decisions when you're sharpest
  • Gut + Documentation — intuition works because it's trained and recorded
  • The flywheel — documentation → preparation → trusted gut → documentation

Jeff Bezos at the Economic Club of Washington, September 2018

The Interview That Changed How CEOs Think

September 13, 2018. The Washington Hilton. Jeff Bezos—then the world's richest person—sat down with David Rubenstein for a 70-minute interview at the Economic Club of Washington.

When asked about decision-making, Bezos delivered an answer that would become one of the most-cited pieces of executive wisdom of the decade:

"As a senior executive, what do you really get paid to do? You get paid to make a small number of high-quality decisions."

"Your job is not to make thousands of decisions every day."

"If I make, like, three good decisions a day, that's enough. And they should be as high quality as I can make them."

— Jeff Bezos, Economic Club of Washington, 2018

Then came the reference that connected Amazon's culture to its philosophical roots:

"Warren Buffett says he's good if he makes three good decisions a year. So, you know, I really believe that."

Three decisions a day for a CEO running a $2 trillion company. Three decisions a year for an investor managing $900 billion. Different scales, same principle: quality over quantity.

The 10am Rule

Bezos doesn't just limit the number of decisions. He's obsessive about when he makes them.

"I do my high-IQ meetings before lunch. Like, anything that's going to be really mentally challenging, that's a 10 o'clock meeting."

"And by 5 p.m., I'm like, 'I can't think about that today. Let's try this again tomorrow at 10 a.m.'"

— Jeff Bezos

This isn't laziness. It's protection. Bezos knows that a decision made at 6pm, when you're tired and want to go home, often isn't actually faster—because you'll second-guess it tomorrow and potentially redo it.

Bezos's Daily Architecture

Morning
"I like to putter in the morning"—read newspapers, have breakfast with kids
10am-12pm
"High-IQ meetings"—all major decisions scheduled here
After 5pm
"Let's try this again tomorrow"—no major decisions

The Sleep Non-Negotiable

Bezos is famously protective of his sleep—and frames it explicitly as a decision-quality strategy:

"I get eight hours of sleep. I prioritize it."

"So, let's say I slept four hours a day. Now I have 33 percent more time to make decisions. So if I was going to make a hundred decisions, now I can make 133 decisions. Is that really worth it if the quality of those decisions might be lower because you're tired or grouchy?"

— Jeff Bezos

The math is devastating for hustle culture: 33% more decisions isn't worth anything if they're worse decisions. At Bezos's scale, a single bad decision could cost billions.

The Hidden Cost of "More Hours"

Bezos's point: we celebrate executives who work 18-hour days, but we don't audit whether their extra decisions were good ones. At the CEO level, one bad decision made at midnight can wipe out the value of a hundred small decisions made while exhausted.

The "Gut Decision" Paradox

Here's where Bezos says something that seems to contradict everything else:

"All of my best decisions in business and in life have been made with heart, intuition, guts... not analysis."

— Jeff Bezos

Wait—the CEO of the most data-driven company on Earth says his best decisions aren't driven by analysis?

Here's what people miss: Bezos isn't saying "don't analyze." He's saying analysis is table stakes. After you've done the analysis, the final call—for the truly important decisions—comes from trained intuition.

And that intuition isn't magic. It's trained by:

Documentation

Every major Amazon decision is documented in a 6-pager memo. Not just WHAT was decided—but WHY. The alternatives considered, the reasoning applied, the dissenting opinions.

Pattern Recognition

When you've reviewed hundreds of decision memos—successes and failures—your brain builds models. "Gut feeling" is pattern matching against that library.

The Real Insight

Bezos's gut decisions aren't untrained instincts. They're the output of a system that documents reasoning, preserves institutional memory, and trains intuition through structured reflection. His "gut" has been reading 6-pagers for 20 years.

The Decision Flywheel

Bezos (like Buffett) doesn't treat decisions as isolated events. They're part of a loop:

The Bezos-Buffett Decision Loop

1
PREPARE
Read. Think. Build mental models.
2
DECIDE
Trust trained intuition for the big calls.
3
DOCUMENT
Write down WHY. Preserve the reasoning.
4
LEARN
Documentation feeds future preparation.

The loop closes: Documentation becomes preparation. Preparation trains intuition. Intuition makes decisions. Decisions get documented.

This is why Buffett re-reads his own shareholder letters. This is why Amazon archives every 6-pager. Documentation isn't bureaucracy—it's how you train organizational intuition.

Type 1 vs Type 2: The Speed Framework

Bezos doesn't apply the same rigor to every decision. He distinguishes between two types:

Type 1: One-Way Doors

Irreversible decisions. High stakes. Hard to undo.

  • • Acquisitions, major pivots, key hires
  • • Deserve deep analysis and documentation
  • • Worth the 6-pager investment

Type 2: Two-Way Doors

Reversible decisions. Lower stakes. Easy to course-correct.

  • • Most day-to-day decisions
  • • Decide with ~70% of desired information
  • • "Disagree and commit" if needed

"Most decisions should probably be made with somewhere around 70% of the information you wish you had. If you wait for 90%, in most cases, you're probably being slow."

— Jeff Bezos, 2016 Shareholder Letter

The failure mode Bezos warns against: treating Type 2 decisions like Type 1. When organizations apply heavy process to every decision, they become slow without becoming better.

Disagree and Commit

What happens when the team can't reach consensus? Bezos's answer: disagree and commit.

"I disagree and commit all the time. We recently greenlit a particular Amazon Studios original. I told the team my view: debatable whether it would be interesting enough, complicated to produce, the business terms aren't that good, and we have lots of other opportunities."

"They had a completely different opinion and wanted to go ahead. I wrote back right away with 'I disagree and commit and hope it becomes the most watched thing we've ever made.'"

— Jeff Bezos, 2016 Shareholder Letter

The key is that disagreement gets documented. The reasoning on both sides is preserved. If the decision proves wrong, there's a record to learn from. If it proves right, there's a record of what the dissent looked like and why it didn't win.

Why This Matters

"Disagree and commit" isn't about suppressing dissent. It's about preserving dissent while maintaining speed. The disagreement is on record. The reasoning is documented. The organization moves forward. And when it's time to evaluate the decision, all the context is there.

From Buffett to Bezos to Your Organization

Warren Buffett built $900 billion making 3 decisions a year, documented in shareholder letters. Jeff Bezos built a $2 trillion company making 3 decisions a day, documented in 6-pagers.

The scale is different. The principle is identical:

1

Protect your high-quality decisions

Don't dilute cognitive capacity across hundreds of small choices.

2

Schedule decisions for peak clarity

Tired decisions aren't faster—they're just worse.

3

Document the reasoning, not just the conclusion

Today's documentation becomes tomorrow's preparation.

4

Trust trained intuition—but train it first

Gut decisions work when the gut has been fed structured preparation.

Buffett trains his intuition by reading 500 pages a day. Bezos built a system—6-pagers, silent reading, disagree and commit—that trains organizational intuition at scale.

The question for your organization: What system do you have to capture reasoning, preserve institutional memory, and turn today's decisions into tomorrow's preparation?

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Frequently Asked Questions

What did Jeff Bezos say about high-quality decisions?

In a 2018 interview at the Economic Club of Washington, Bezos said: 'As a senior executive, what do you really get paid to do? You get paid to make a small number of high-quality decisions. Your job is not to make thousands of decisions every day. If I make, like, three good decisions a day, that's enough. And they should be as high quality as I can make them.' He then referenced Warren Buffett: 'Warren Buffett says he's good if he makes three good decisions a year.'

Why does Jeff Bezos schedule important decisions for 10am?

Bezos explained: 'I do my high-IQ meetings before lunch. Like, anything that's going to be really mentally challenging, that's a 10 o'clock meeting.' He deliberately avoids major decisions after 5pm, saying: 'By 5 p.m., I'm like, I can't think about that today. Let's try this again tomorrow at 10 a.m.' He prioritizes decision quality over decision quantity, recognizing that tired or rushed decisions often need to be revisited anyway.

What does Bezos mean by 'gut decisions'?

Bezos said: 'All of my best decisions in business and in life have been made with heart, intuition, guts... not analysis.' But this doesn't mean he avoids analysis. It means that for his most important decisions, after all analysis is done, the final call comes from trained intuition. His intuition is trained by decades of reading, Amazon's 6-pager documentation system, and systematic decision review. Gut decisions without preparation are guesses; gut decisions with preparation are pattern recognition.

How does Bezos think about sleep and decision-making?

Bezos prioritizes 8 hours of sleep because it protects decision quality. He said: 'If you shortchange your sleep, you might get a couple of extra productive hours, but that productivity might be an illusion because you're going to make lower quality decisions.' He rejects the macho culture of working on minimal sleep, noting: 'If the quality of those decisions might be lower because you're tired or grouchy, that's not worth it.'

What is Bezos's '70% information' rule for decisions?

Bezos believes most decisions should be made with about 70% of the information you wish you had. Waiting for 90% certainty means you're too slow. He distinguishes between Type 1 decisions (irreversible 'one-way doors' that deserve deep analysis) and Type 2 decisions (reversible 'two-way doors' that should be made quickly). Most decisions are Type 2, but organizations often treat them as Type 1, creating unnecessary slowness.

What is 'disagree and commit' at Amazon?

Disagree and commit is Bezos's principle for avoiding decision paralysis: once a decision is made, everyone commits to executing it fully, even those who disagreed. Bezos has said he uses this himself: 'I disagree and commit all the time.' The key is that disagreement is documented—so if the decision proves wrong, the organization can learn from it. It's not about suppressing dissent; it's about moving forward while preserving the record.

How did Bezos operationalize Buffett's philosophy at Amazon?

Bezos credits Buffett's 'three good decisions a year' philosophy as an influence. He operationalized it at Amazon through: (1) The 6-pager memo system—forcing structured reasoning before meetings; (2) Silent reading at the start of meetings—ensuring everyone engages with the full argument; (3) Type 1/Type 2 decision framework—knowing which decisions deserve deep analysis; (4) Disagree and commit—preserving dissent while maintaining speed. Amazon's systems capture reasoning, not just conclusions.

AT

Argumentree Team

Executive Leadership

The Argumentree team is pioneering structured decision intelligence for enterprises worldwide. Our mission is to transform how organizations make, document, and learn from decisions.

How Argumentree Helps You Apply This

Bezos built the 6-pager. Buffett writes shareholder letters. Both methods share one goal: capture reasoning, not just conclusions. Argumentree gives your team the same discipline—automatically.

Make every decision count.

Bezos makes 3 high-quality decisions a day. Your organization can too—with structured reasoning that compounds over time. Documentation becomes preparation. Preparation enables trusted decisions.

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