Planning Fallacy
- Categories
- Decision Making
- Sources
- Thinking, Fast and Slow
Plans and forecasts are systematically too optimistic, built on best-case scenarios and the specifics of the current case while ignoring how similar efforts actually went. Estimates skew toward the inside view.
Why it Matters
The inside view, this plan and these tasks, ignores the base rate of comparable projects, which almost always took longer and cost more. The outside view, reference-class forecasting, corrects it.
Signals
- Estimates that assume nothing goes wrong.
- Repeated overruns despite a history of overruns.
- No comparison to how long similar work actually took.
Benefits
Using the outside view and a reference class produces realistic estimates and sensible buffers.
Risks
Committing to optimistic timelines and budgets, and compounding the error by re-planning from the inside view each time.
Tensions
Optimism motivates and is socially rewarded, while realistic forecasts feel pessimistic and get resisted.
Examples
A project planned for three months that takes a year, like nearly every comparable one; budgets that ignore the overrun rate of similar initiatives.