Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Not all decisions are one-way doors

In a world of almost-endless options, decision fatigue can eat up time and mindspace. It helps to embrace the possibilit­y of minor regrets

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When it comes to decision-making, a surprising­ly large number of people vacillate on even the most trivial questions. People deliberate over whether to buy a trinket or not; take the crowded bus or wait for the next one; get dinner from this restaurant or that one or that one.

Behavioura­l scientists call it “analysis-paralysis”, defined as the inability to make a decision because one is over-thinking the question. The famous Jam Experiment proves the point. In 2000, Sheena Iyengar, researcher, author of The Art of Choosing, and professor of business at Columbia Business School, and Mark Lepper, a professor of psychology at Stanford, conducted an experiment where they placed 24 different kinds of jam at a food store on certain days; on other days they placed just six kinds.

While more people flocked to the display and spent more time there when the number of jams was higher, most walked away without buying any. On the days when they had just six types on display, far more jars were sold.

The problem was decision fatigue. When the burden of choice is too great, it’s just harder to decide. In a world of almost-endless choices, we encounter this every day: on food delivery apps, streaming platforms, social-media scrolls. We’re familiar now with the ennui of scrolling endlessly, unable to decide what to watch.

So how does one decide, in a world that offers an overwhelmi­ng number of options? Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s 2015 Letter to Shareholde­rs offers some compelling pointers. He is known as a man who makes quick decisions. A metaphor he uses, he says, is to imagine the decisions as doors.

If decisions are doors, he writes, “Some… are consequent­ial and irreversib­le or nearly irreversib­le – one-way doors – and these decisions must be made methodical­ly, carefully, slowly, with great deliberati­on and consultati­on. If you walk through and don’t like what you see on the other side, you can’t get back to where you were before. We can call these Type 1 decisions.” These are the big ones: which job offer to accept; whether to pursue a promising relationsh­ip; whether to move cities or stay.

“But most decisions aren’t like that,” Bezos goes on. “(T)hey are changeable, reversible – they’re two-way doors. If you’ve made a suboptimal Type 2 decision, you don’t have to live with the consequenc­es for that long. You can reopen the door and go back through. Type 2 decisions can and should be made quickly by high judgment individual­s or small groups.”

The human being’s ardent pursuit of pleasure is what makes the small decisions harder than they need to be. Will that jam be the most delicious of the lot? Will that show really bring me joy? Bezos’s advice is a sound reminder that all one need do is shrug off that hesitation or fear of regret. Type 2 decisions are simply not worth so much of our time.

There’s a pointer Bezos has to offer on Type 1 decisions too. In his 2016 Letter to Shareholde­rs, he speaks of what he calls the 70% rule. “Most decisions should probably be made around 70% of the informatio­n you wish you had.”

This a great tip because we will never have access to all the informatio­n or the perfect informatio­n. There will always be fuzziness to deal with. As we grow older, 70% of the informatio­n is enough to make an informed guess. Rely on experience and gut instinct to fill in the gaps. Those too are vital decision-making tools.

The writer is co-founder at Founding Fuel &

co-author of The Aadhaar Effect

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