Only make decisions when you have at least 40% of the relevant information, but never wait until you have more than 70%.
This is called the 40-70 rule and it describes the ideal relationship between time and information, ensuring you act fast, but not uninformed, without waiting until making a decision eventually becomes moot.
And in most situations, focusing on very few, but crucially important facts, while blocking out all the rest, is enough to do so.
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