How We Should Differentiate Decision and Outcome

Because of the role of luck in our lives we need to be able to differentiate the quality of our decision and its outcome. That’s a key lesson I learnt from an excellent book ‘Thinking in Bets: Making Smarter Decisions When You Don’t Have All the Facts‘ by Annie Duke, a professional poker player turned business speaker and author.

We have a tendency to equate the quality of our decisions with their outcome. “Poker players have a word for this : “resulting”. When I started playing poker , more experienced players warned me about the dangers of resulting , cautioning me to resist the temptation to change my strategy just because a few hands didn’t turn out well in the short run“.

This distinction is profound and I do fall into this trap too. Like almost everybody: “ask any group members to come […] with a brief description of their best and worst decisions of the previous year . I have yet to come across someone who doesn’t identify their best and worst results rather than their best and worst decisions .

I am committing to try to discern the quality of the decision versus its outcome, because I believe it is important when it comes to improving one’s decision-making ability.

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