Plans are nothing. Planning is everything.

The reasons behind planning fallacy: A couple of common reasons for planning fallacy are planning made by the people who are not responsible for the execution (higher management), over-optimism, an unwillingness for the top of the hierarchy to delegate control. Human psychology is definitely a big reason. It is no doubt there are psychological factors as to why upper management chooses to think this way so often: It is as widespread as human nature with the fear of failure and looking bad to one’s peers and leaders. It is human nature to make a plan, fall in love with it, and defend it vigorously despite clear indications that the wheels have clearly fallen off the cart at some point.
"Plans are nothing. Planning is everything" (Eisenhower): The problem is not that people create bad plans, we all do. It is that they stop planning at that point and building new learning in. The whole point of dynamic planning, not a static plan, is to keep iterating, learning, and working on a rhythm of sustained delivery, that includes planning, but very few organizations seem to get it. Often, people prefer to make a few big decisions rather than many small ones. There needs to have a desire in that same place to make one big decision and be done with it, let the lower people track and deliver it. But there is a shortage of understanding in the whole culture, so from the management perspective, it is possible to run things as programmers rather than managers. If that's the case, they really need to delegate to someone (individual or group) who is prepared to take the time and effort to allocate work or resources in a more appropriate manner (both catching the big picture and understanding the significant details). Let the top management decide strategy and devolve the implementation of that strategy to others, so the implementation can be given due care and consideration.

The mantra for planning success would be to apply the agile philosophy to a) Shape a mindset for planning (not plan) and practice management via iterative communication, incremental goal implementation, customer-centric viewpoint, and taking plan as shareware, not shelf-ware. b) Get the bigger picture to clear on what, who, when, and how to achieve business goals based on the dollar value and available resources. c) Then plan a little and try implementing to see immediate results to verify against the expectations. Always keep the big picture, make dynamic planning, make a necessary delegation implement plan collaboratively and seamlessly.
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