
Expanding Your Luck Surface Area: The Game-Changer You Didn't Know You Needed!
We don't control when it "rains" luck, but we do control how much of it we catch.
Note: This essay covers the core concepts we discussed during the second week of our current Permissionless Academy cohort.
We’ve all heard the saying, “Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.”
It sounds smart, but it’s missing a huge piece of the puzzle. We usually talk about luck like a lightning bolt, a random event that hits some people and misses others. While it’s true that we cannot control when or where luck strikes, we can absolutely control our receptivity to it.
In our second week at Permissionless Academy, we dove into the concept of Luck Surface Area (LSA).
The Rainwater Analogy
Think of luck like a rainstorm. You have zero control over the weather. You can't make it rain, and you can't predict exactly when the clouds will open up. In that sense, luck is completely random.
However, imagine two people standing in a field during that storm.
The first person is holding a tiny coffee cup. They are prepared to catch water, but their "reception" is limited to a few square inches. No matter how hard it rains, they will only ever have one cup of water.
The second person has spent their time building a giant plastic tarp. They’ve staked it into the ground, tilted it perfectly, and funneled the edges into a massive barrel.
When the rain starts, both people are in the exact same "lucky" spot. But the person with the tarp catches thousands of times more water. Luck Surface Area is the size of your tarp. It is the intentional way you live and work so that when a random opportunity falls from the sky, you are positioned to capture all of it, not just a sip.
The Permission Trap
Most of us were raised to be the person with the coffee cup. We were told to keep our heads down, work hard, and wait for someone to notice us. We were taught that "good things come to those who wait."
The problem with "keeping your head down" is that it makes your tarp tiny. If you are the best coder or the best writer in the world, but you stay in your basement and never tell anyone, your luck surface area is zero.
You are stuck in the Permission Trap. You are waiting for a teacher to give you an 'A,' a boss to give you a promotion, or a recruiter to give you a call. You are hoping that luck will strike your tiny coffee cup by accident.
In the modern world, nobody is coming to find you in your basement. To catch the rain, you have to be out in the field, and you have to be visible.
The Two Knobs: Doing and Telling
Building your "tarp" isn't a mystery. You grow your Luck Surface Area by turning two specific knobs: Doing and Telling.
1. Doing (The Work)
This is your foundation. You must be active. You have to build projects, solve problems, and sharpen your skills. This is the "Preparation" part of the luck equation. If you don't do the work, your tarp is full of holes. You can't catch luck with a net that isn't solid.
The more things you do, the more "hooks" you have in the world. Every project you finish is a new bucket you’ve placed in the field.
2. Telling (The Visibility)
This is where most people fail because of fear. You have to tell the world what you are doing. This means sharing your progress, writing about your failures, and being public with your journey.
When you tell people about your work, you are essentially spreading out the edges of your tarp. You are making yourself "findable." When a random person on the internet sees your work and sends you a DM with an opportunity, that looks like "luck" to everyone else. But it wasn't random. It happened because you made your tarp big enough for that specific raindrop to hit you.
The Multiplier Effect
The magic happens when you do both at the same time.
If you do a lot of work ($D$) but tell no one ($T$), your luck is low.
If you talk a lot ($T$) but do no work ($D$), people realize you are a "poser," and your luck stays low.
But when you increase both, they multiply each other.
A student who builds a small app and writes a simple blog post about how they did it has 100x more luck surface area than a student who builds a perfect app but tells no one. The first student is inviting the world to collaborate. The second student is just waiting for a miracle.
How to Start Building Your Tarp Today
It doesn’t require a complex marketing plan or a fancy brand. It just requires a shift in how you spend your time.
Share the "Messy Middle": Don’t wait for a "finished product" to talk. Share what you are learning right now. Share the bug you can't fix. Share the lesson you just learned.
Be a Node: Every person you help and every conversation you have expands your reach. You are placing more "buckets" in different parts of the field.
Be Authentic: Authenticity acts like a magnet. It ensures that the luck you catch is the right kind of luck for who you actually are.
Keep Learning: Every new skill is a new section added to your tarp. A person who knows how to design and how to sell has a much larger surface area than someone who only knows one.
Final Thoughts
Luck might be random, but your ability to capture it is not.
At Permissionless Academy, we teach this in the second week because it changes how you look at your day. You stop being a victim of "bad luck" and start being the architect of "good luck."
Stop worrying about when the rain will come. The clouds will open when they open. Your only job is to make sure that when it finally pours, you aren't standing there with a coffee cup.
Get out in the field. Do the work. Tell the world.
About the Author
Avneesh Kumar is the founder of Permissionless Academy — a modern learning platform built on the belief that real skills come from building real things, not collecting credentials.
He spent a decade building inside the education system before concluding that meaningful change has to come from outside it. Today he builds AI-native products through Schoolze Labs, Monterey AI Labs, and a handful of other ventures — all running without a traditional team.
He writes about education, agency, and building leverage in the age of AI.
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