I've been thinking recently about how to balance between process (how I get work done) and outcomes (what I achieve). I thought I'd ask the LessWrong community to see if anyone else has thoughts about this they'd like to share. I feel like both are important, but outcomes is a more long-term focus thing and process more of a daily thing. Outcomes are like long-running experiments for how you judge between different styles of process? In cases where it's hard to get reliable outcome answers, when failing at hard things or succeeding at easy things, or timeframes are long, or uncertainty high, it can be tempting to over-update on limited evidence. Is it then better to test process types on easier examples and then extrapolate to harder ones?
Perhaps your goal was to state things provocatively, or perhaps you were just being terse. If so then maybe this doesn't apply.
I struggle finding a way to agree with your suggestion if I take your claims seriously. If outcomes actually do depend on luck -- "depend" being a rather strong concept here I think -- then why spend any but the more trivial amount of effort on process? Process cannot solve bad luck or really influence good luck (if it can then I don't think we're talking about luck at all).