The Decision-Making Blueprint
eBook - ePub

The Decision-Making Blueprint

A Simple Guide to Better Choices in Life and Work

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Decision-Making Blueprint

A Simple Guide to Better Choices in Life and Work

About this book

Radically Upgrade Your Thinking & Dramatically Increase Your Success

What if there was a way to routinely make smart decisions? What if you could reliably avoid costly mistakes? What if you could remarkably improve your results in all areas of life? Mental trainer and best-selling author Patrik Edblad has helped tens of thousands of readers to think rationally, logically, and effectively. In this book, he lays out a simple, concise, and actionable guide to intelligent decision-making. Step-by-step, you'll discover:

- The cognitive biases that distort your thinking, and how to counteract them.

- The logical fallacies that derail your judgment, and how to prevent them.

- The mental models you need to equip your mind with to make great decisions.

- PLUS: The Decision-Making Blueprint Bonus Bundle— A FREE complimentary resource to easily apply everything you learn in your own decisions. Make a life-changing decision today! Get your copy NOW to radically improve your thinking and dramatically increase your success!

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Yes, you can access The Decision-Making Blueprint by Patrik Edblad in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Decision Making. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Patrik Edblad
Year
2019
Print ISBN
9781942761983
eBook ISBN
9781393553533

PART 1: INTRODUCTION

The Secrets to Great Decision-Making

Throughout history, standard economic theory was dominated by the model of “homo economicus”: the economic man. According to that model, humans are self-interested, intelligent, and analytical beings who can control their feelings and impulses. The economic man constantly evaluates all the facts, weighs the costs and benefits, and makes rational decisions to maximize personal well-being.
This view of humans as cold and rational calculators provides a convenient foundation for economic theories.
The only problem? No such person exists.

The Fall of Homo Economicus

It turns out that people often make decisions that don’t deliver the best outcomes. Sometimes, we even make choices that we know will hurt our future prospects.
The first researchers to study these peculiar tendencies extensively were psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. In the early 1970s, they started investigating the psychology involved in decision-making and running experiments to test their hypotheses.
Over the coming years, they compiled a long list of well-documented irrational behaviors, and in 1979 they published their key paper, “Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk.”1
Their findings caused a lot of controversy, especially among economists looking to protect their worldview. But Kahneman and Tversky stood their ground, and their work eventually marked the start for a new field of study.

The Rise of Behavioral Economics

Behavioral economics is a subfield of economics that studies how psychological, social, and emotional factors influence decision-making. The fundamental principle of this discipline is that people make systematic errors in their thinking.
Behavioral economists have found that the vast majority of our choices aren’t the result of careful calculations. Instead, we rely heavily on mental shortcuts like rules of thumb, intuition, and common sense to form judgments, solve problems, and make decisions.
These shortcuts can work well in a lot of situations but, at times, they also result in cognitive biases and logical fallacies, thinking errors that distort our reasoning and derail our judgment.

An Ancient Brain in a Modern World

So, why do we make systematic errors in our thinking? Why do we use mental shortcuts instead of carefully calculating our decisions? What makes us susceptible to biases and fallacies?
The answers to those questions lie in our evolutionary past. Our brains have evolved for millions of years, not to maximize our well-being, but to keep us alive.
For most of our history, we lived in an environment that was wildly different from modern society. And that explains why we reason the way we do.
Mental shortcuts provided an efficient means for us to make quick decisions with limited knowledge in a complex world.
A lot of decisions that seem irrational today served us well in the environment we evolved in. To illustrate that, let’s have a look at an example.

Loss Aversion

People have a tendency to prefer avoiding losses to acquiring equivalent gains. In other words, we feel better not losing $10 than we do finding $10.
Some research suggests that losses are twice as powerful, psychologically, as gains. And from an evolutionary perspective, that’s a useful mechanism.
For most of human history, reductions in resources could lead to death. In that scenario, it makes sense to place a higher value on preventing losses than obtaining gains.
In modern-day life, however, losses rarely have the same dire consequences. And since that’s the case, loss aversion no longer makes rational sense.
In the past, loss aversion helped our ancestors protect their scarce resources and stay alive. But in the present, the same bias often leads to poor decisions. When investing, for example, most people keep losing stocks and sell winning stocks even though, rationally, they should do the exact opposite.

Bad Decisions Everywhere

Loss aversion is just one example of how the brain makes systematic errors. There are many other biases and fallacies that diminish our ability to make sound judgments and reason logically.
We are fundamentally wired for mistakes and, as a result, we make a lot of poor decisions. The evidence is everywhere.
Career choices, for instance, are often regretted or abandoned. According to a Gallup report,2 a majority of Americans would change at least one education decision, including their choice of college, their major, or their degree, if they could do it all over again.
When it comes to our health, we consistently make choices that are bad for us. One in three adults doesn’t get enough sleep.3 Roughly the same number of people are physically inactive.4 And out of all deaths worldwide, 20 percent are attributable to bad food choices.5
We don’t do much better in our social lives. Young people frequently start relationships with people who are bad for them. About 40 to 50 percent of marriages end in divorce.6 And at the end of life, some of the most common regrets are working too much and losing touch with friends.7
The reason we struggle so much in these areas, and many others, is that we lack decision-making skills. Despite the vast implications our choices have on our lives, we’re never explicitly taught how to make them.

A Simple Guide to Great Thinking

The good news is that you can train your brain to think in new and better ways. And in this book, I will show you exactly how to do that. In the chapters ahead, you’ll discover:
  • The cognitive biases that distort your thinking, and how to counteract them.
  • The logical fallacies that derail your judgment, and how to prevent them.
  • The mental models you need to equip your mind with to make great decisions.
We’ll draw from philosophical ideas, psychological research, and powerful concepts from a wide variety of discipline...

Table of contents

  1. PART 1: INTRODUCTION
  2. PART 2: COGNITIVE BIASES
  3. PART 3: LOGICAL FALLACIES
  4. PART 4: MENTAL MODELS
  5. PART 5: FINAL WORDS