Why Experts Struggle at the Edge of Change

Why Experts Struggle at the Edge of Change

“An expert is an expert on how the world used to be, not what it might become.”

That quote (or some variation of it) has been rattling around in my head for years. And the more I see the world tilting on its axis—especially with tech—the more I believe it.

See, expertise is a double-edged sword.

On one side: hard-earned knowledge, pattern recognition, deep intuition, frameworks built on evidence.

On the other: rigidity, overconfidence, blind spots, and a subtle but dangerous attachment to “what used to work.”

The world doesn’t stay still. And inflection points don’t ask permission.

The Nature of Expertise

Expertise is, by definition, retrospective. It’s about accumulated understanding from repeated exposure to a relatively stable system. The more you’ve seen, the more patterns you recognize, the better you can predict outcomes—within that system.

Experts thrive when things evolve linearly.

But inflection points?

They’re not linear.

They’re discontinuous.

They rewrite the rules of the system itself.

And that’s where the trouble begins.

When Expertise Gets in the Way

Most experts have their identity wrapped up in being right. That’s fine when the world is steady. But when the ground shifts—when a new wave crashes in—experts often become skeptics, not visionaries.

It’s not malicious. It’s just human. You can’t dedicate decades to mastering a domain and not feel resistance when something threatens to overturn it.

History’s full of examples:

Each time, the “experts” relied on what they knew—but what they knew had quietly expired.

Inflection Points are Pattern Breakers

Inflection points don’t politely knock on the door. They smash the frame and install a sliding glass panel instead. The very idea of how things work is up for grabs.

And this is the problem:

Experts often look for new patterns to fit old ones. But when the new pattern doesn’t play by the old rules, they label it incomplete, wrong, or unworkable.

This is why you see seasoned professionals dismiss disruptive ideas with phrases like:

Until it’s not. And by then, it’s too late.

Who Does Thrive at Inflection Points?

Ironically, it’s often not the experts. It’s the curious, the cross-pollinators, the tinkerers, the outsiders.

These are people who:

They’re not always “right,” but they’re often closer to the edge of what’s coming. And they’re not trapped by legacy thinking.

The Trap of Past Success

If you’ve been rewarded for doing things a certain way, it’s hard to let go. Why would you?

But clinging to past success is like gripping a map that doesn’t match the terrain anymore. You can follow it perfectly—and still walk off a cliff.

In tech, we’re seeing this right now with AI.

People trained on traditional machine learning paradigms are struggling to wrap their heads around LLMs, agents, and emergent behaviour. It’s not just a new tool—it’s a new frame of reference.

Same with people trying to apply 20th-century rules to 21st-century platforms.

Old playbooks don’t work in new games.

So, What Should You Do?

Here’s my take, based on years watching this dance play out:

1. Respect expertise, but interrogate it.

Ask: What assumptions is this advice built on? Are those assumptions still valid?

2. Look for first principles.

Don’t just copy tactics. Understand the underlying forces. What’s actually happening?

3. Stay curious and keep experimenting.

The best way to see the future is to build small versions of it and see what works.

4. Get comfortable with ambiguity.

Inflection points feel messy. The trick is not mistaking that mess for madness. It’s often just early-stage brilliance.

5. Diversify your inputs.

If everyone you listen to is an “expert,” your perspective is skewed. Add in voices from outside your bubble.

Final Thought

Experts are great at explaining how we got here.

But getting to what’s next?

That takes something else.

A beginner’s mind.

A flexible spirit.

A healthy dose of irreverence.

And maybe the courage to say, “I don’t know—but I’m willing to find out.”

#StayFrosty!