People tend to underestimate the time, costs, and risks of future actions and overestimate the benefits. If you're planning a home renovation, you might expect it to take a few weeks when it ends up taking several months.
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Being an ambivert person, I am too much fond of reading, and always eager to learn.
These cognitive biases and mind traps influence decision-making, perception, and behavior in various aspects of our lives. Recognizing them can help us make more rational and informed choices.
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Similar ideas to 21. Planning Fallacy:
The planning fallacy is the likelihood to underestimate the time it will take to finish a future task despite knowing that similar projects have taken longer in the past. For example, writers underestimate how long it will take to complete a novel; product managers miscalcula...
We tend to underestimate the time it will take to complete a future task despite knowing that previous tasks have taken longer.
What you can do about it:
The term 'planning fallacy' was coined in 1977 and deals with how most of us are terrible at estimating how long a project will take. We are overly optimistic but terrible at predicting the future. If the project has a budget, we may underestimate that expense to...
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