The idea of ‘thinking it faster’ is provocative, because it seems to be over-optimising for speed rather than other values, where as the way you’re implementing it is by generating more meaningful or efficient decisions which are underpinned by a meta-analysis of your process—which is actually about increasing the quality of your decision-making.
I considered changing it to “Think it Sooner”, which nudges you a bit away from “try to think frenetically fast” and towards “just learn to steer towards the most efficient parts of your thought process, avoid wasted motion, and use more effective metastrategies.” “Think It Sooner” feels noticeably harder to say so I decided to stick with the original (although I streamlined the phrasing from “Think That Thought faster” a bit so it rolled off the tongue)
I considered changing it to “Think it Sooner”, which nudges you a bit away from “try to think frenetically fast” and towards “just learn to steer towards the most efficient parts of your thought process, avoid wasted motion, and use more effective metastrategies.” “Think It Sooner” feels noticeably harder to say so I decided to stick with the original (although I streamlined the phrasing from “Think That Thought faster” a bit so it rolled off the tongue)
I see, I think you’re right not to change it—it’s just provocative enough to be catchy.