https://doi.org/10.24928/2024/0115

Magical vs Methodical: Choosing by Advantages as Antidote to the Planning Fallacy

Eran Haronian1 & Samuel Korb2

1Lecturer, Department of Civil Engineering, Ariel University, Ariel, 40700, Israel, [email protected]
2PhD, Graduate of the Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel, [email protected]

Abstract

Cost and schedule overruns are the bane of construction projects, in part due to overly optimistic predictions of project progression. This “optimism bias” is called the planning fallacy, a form of “magical thinking” where planners convince themselves that their project will be different (and better) than others. “Choosing by Advantages” (CBA) is a methodical approach for decision-making. By engaging “slow thinking” at the organizational level, CBA can help counteract the tendency to default to best-case scenarios when selecting among designs and production methods, even in the middle of a project. In this paper, a case study of a Pumped Hydroelectric Energy Storage facility that had to choose between a bottom-up raise boring and a top-down shaft sinking construction method for the vertical shaft connecting the reservoirs is presented. The paper then examines how CBA helped shift the thinking of the project team away from fallacious planning and overcome the sunk-cost fallacy.

Keywords

Choosing by Advantages, Optimism Bias, Planning Fallacy, Risk Management, Monte Carlo

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Reference

Haronian, E. & Korb, S. 2024. Magical vs Methodical: Choosing by Advantages as Antidote to the Planning Fallacy, Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction (IGLC 32) , 1099-1110. doi.org/10.24928/2024/0115

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