When was the last time you tried to estimate a task?
It will take one hour, you thought. But then, three hours passed by, and you were still there. That’s the planning fallacy.
I learned to deal with it last year, when I became a team leader. I had to plan many tasks, but I didn’t want to look like I was wasting time, so my estimations were short. And after a few weeks, I had to work overtime to recover.
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Outsmart Your Brain: 7 Mental Biases That Kill Your Focus Every Day
cosmopolitanmindset.substack.com
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Passionate about self-improvement, personal growth, finance, and creativity. I love to inspire people to become the better version of themselves. Author @ www.cosmopolitanmindset.com
Learn how to spot and stop the sneaky mental traps ruining your productivity. Outsmart your brain by defeating these 7 mental biases that kill your focus every day.
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Similar ideas to 1 — The Planning Fallacy (1)
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...
The Planning Fallacy is a prediction error that one repeatedly makes, misestimating the time it takes to complete a certain task.
This usually happens when trying to complete an unpleasant or stressful task, leading to postponement, procrastination and eventually missed de...
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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