The book is split into four core themes:
- Part ONE - What Influences Our Thinking?
- Part TWO - The Psychology Of Misjudgments
- Part THREE - The Physics and Mathematics of Misjudgments
- Part FOUR - Guidelines to Better Thinking
Contents:
PART TWO - THE PSYCHOLOGY OF MISJUDGMENTS
PART THREE - THE PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS OF MISJUDGMENTS
- Systems thinking
- Scale and limits
- Causes
- Numbers and their meaning
- Probabilities and number of possible outcomes
- Scenarios
- Coincidences and miracles
- Reliability of case evidence
- Misrepresentative evidence
PART FOUR - GUIDELINES TO BETTER THINKING
- Models of reality
- Meaning
- Simplification
- Rules and filters
- Goals
- Alternatives
- Consequences
- Quantification
- Evidence
- Backward thinking
- Risk
- Attitudes
PART TWO - THE PSYCHOLOGY OF MISJUDGMENTS
1. Misjudgments explained by psychology
28 REASONS FOR MISJUDGEMENTS AND MISTAKES:
1. Bias from mere association
Automatically connecting a stimulus with pain or pleasure; including liking or disliking something associated with something bad or good. Includes seeing situations as identical because they seem similar. Also bias from Persian Messenger Syndrome - not wanting to be the carrier of bad news.
2. Underestimating the power of rewards and punishment
People repeat actions that result in rewards and avoid actions that they are punished for.
If people don’t have to pay for a benefit, they often overuse it.
After a success, we become overly optimistic risk-takers. After a failure, we become overly pessimistic and risk-averse, even in cases where success or failure was merely a result of chance.
We do not improve the man we hang. We improve others by him.
Incentives to performance: make people share both the upside and downside. Make them understand the link between their performance, their reward, and what you finally want to accomplish.
Reward individual performance, not effort or length in organization.
3. Underestimating bias from own self-interest and incentives.
We never look at projections, but we look very deeply at track records. It’s naive to think that projections have any utility whatsoever.
Do not train learning by force. Lead them by what amuses them.
Convince people by asking questions that illuminate consequences.
4. Self-serving bias
Overly positive view of our abilities and future. Includes over-optimism.
The more we think we know about a subject, the less willing we are to use other ideas. We solve a problem in a way that agrees with our area of expertise.
Try to be consistently not stupid, instead of trying to be very intelligent.
It’s the strong swimmers who drown.
Ask: How can I be wrong? Who can tell me if I’m wrong?
Successes draw far more attention than failures.
5. Self-deception and denial
Distortion of reality to reduce pain or increase pleasure. Includes wishful thinking.
6. Bias from consistency tendency
Being consistent with our prior commitments and ideas even when acting against our best interest or in the face of disconfirming evidence. Includes confirmation bias - looking for evidence that confirms our actions and beliefs and ignoring or distorting disconfirming evidence.
We look for evidence that confirms our ideas, beliefs, and actions. When we’ve made an investment or entered into a relationship, we tend to seek out evidence confirming that it was the right decision and to ignore information that shows it was wrong.
The more public a decision is, the less likely it is that we will change it.
We don’t have a strategic plan. Thus we feel no need to proceed in an ordained direction, but can instead simply decide what makes sense.
The task of man is not to see what lies dimly in the distance, but to do what lies dearly at hand.
Respond intelligently and diligently to the information and challenges at hand.
Make it voluntary, for people to take inner responsibility for their actions. When internally motivated by satisfaction or interest, we feel in control, free from incentives or outside pressure.
Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies.
To say you are wrong is saying you are wiser today than yesterday.
When you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.
7. Bias from deprival syndrome
Strongly reacting (including desiring and valuing more) when something we like and have (or almost have) is (or threatens to be) taken away or “lost.” Includes desiring and valuing more what we can’t have or what is (or threatens less available to be).
In investing, it’s a mistake to try to make it back the way you lost it.
People respond to immediate crisis and threats. Anything that happens gradually, they tend to put off If we want people to take a risk, we should make them feel behind (losing). If we want them to stay with the status quo or reject risk, we should make them feel safe.
8. Status quo bias and do-nothing syndrome
Keeping things the way they are. Includes minimizing effort and a preference for default options.
Predicting rain doesn’t count; building arks does.
It took Noah 20 years to build an ark. And people said he was being silly because the skies were beautiful. And of course, the whole time, he looked stupid - until it started raining. You can spend a long time building an ark while everybody else is out there enjoying the sun.
Make yourself do the thing you have to do when it ought to be done whether you like it or not.
9. Impatience
Valuing the present more highly than the future.
10. Bias from envy and jealousy.
Man will do many things to get himself loved; he will do all things to get himself envied.
11. Distortion by contrast comparison
Judging and perceiving the absolute magnitude of something not by itself but based only on its difference to something else presented closely in time or space or to some earlier adaptation level. Also underestimating the consequences over time of gradual changes.
12. Bias from anchoring
Over-weighing certain initial information as a reference point for future decisions.
13. Over-influence by vivid or the most recent information.
Back up vivid stories with facts and numbers.
14. Omission and abstract blindness
Only seeing stimuli we encounter or that grabs our attention, and neglecting important missing information or the abstract. Includes inattentional blindness.
Today 14 million people didn’t win the lottery.
We don’t see the quiet losers. We don’t see those who didn’t predict well.
Missing information doesn’t draw our attention.
15. Bias from reciprocation tendency
Repaying in kind what others have done for or to us like favors, concessions, information and attitudes.
Our managers are independently wealthy. They don’t need to get up and go to work at all. So I’ve got to create an environment where they thing they want to do most in the world is go to work. What would make me feel that way?
People don’t want to feel indebted. Allow people to give back what we’ve given them.
16. Bias from over-influence by liking tendency
Believing, trusting and agreeing with people we know and like. Includes bias from over-desire for liking and social acceptance and for avoiding social disapproval. Also bias from disliking - our tendency to avoid and disagree with people we don’t like.
Talk to a man about himself and he will listen for hours.
17. Bias from over-influence by social proof - imitating the behavior of many others or similar others. Includes crowd folly.
When all are accountable, no one is accountable.
18. Bias from over-influence by authority
Trusting and obeying a perceived authority or expert.
After the break-in at John’s office, he said: “Of course, I believed he was a security guard, since he had a uniform.”
19. Sensemaking
Constructing explanations that fit an outcome. Includes being too quick in drawing conclusions. Also thinking events that have happened were more predictable than they were.
Everything seems stupid when it fails. In hindsight, everything seems obvious. Look at earlier decisions in the context of their own time.
If our predictions have been a little better than other people’s, it’s because we’ve tried to make fewer of them.
20. Reason-respecting
Complying with requests merely because we’ve been given a reason. Includes underestimating the power in giving people reasons.
If you always tell people why, they’ll understand it better, they’ll consider it more important, and they’ll be more likely to comply.
You cannot reason a person out of a position he did not reason himself into in the first place.
People are more moved by what they feel than by what they understand.
21. Believing first and doubting later
Believing what is not true, especially when distracted.
22. Memory limitations
Remembering selectively and wrong. Includes influence by suggestions.
23. Do-something syndrome - acting without a sensible reason.
Man finds nothing so intolerable as to be in a state of complete rest, without passions, without occupation, without diversion, without effort.
24. Mental confusion from say-something syndrome - feeling a need to say something when we have nothing to say.
I have often regretted my speech, never my silence.
25. Emotional arousal
Making hasty judgments under the influence of intense emotions. Includes exaggerating the emotional impact of future events.
26. Mental confusion from stress.
I have no stress whatsoever - zero. I get to do what I love to do every day. I’m surrounded by people that are terrific. All the businesses I run don’t take 5% of my time. We don’t have regular staff meetings. If you’ve got good businesses and the right managers, you don’t need that sort of thing.
It is not stress that harms us but distress.
Complete freedom from stress is death.
27. Mental confusion from physical or psychological pain, the influence of chemicals or diseases.
28. Bias from over-influence by the combined effect of many psychological tendencies operating together.
Once they start stealing, the consistency principle will make stealing habitual.
It’s very very important to create human systems that are hard to cheat.
2. Psychological reasons for mistakes
No man was fit to hold public office who wasn’t perfectly willing to leave it at any time.
You can learn to make fewer mistakes than other people - and how to fix your mistakes faster when you do make them. Get so you can handle mistakes.
People go broke because they can’t stop, rethink and say, “I can afford to write this one off and live to fight again. I don’t have to pursue this thing as an obsession.” You must learn how to handle mistakes and new facts that change the odds.
I now use a two-track analysis: One approach is rationality. Evaluating the real interests, the real probabilities. The other is to evaluate the psychological factors that cause subconscious conclusions - many of which are wrong.
Take all the main models from psychology and use them as a checklist in reviewing outcomes in complex systems.
PART THREE - THE PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS OF MISJUDGMENTS
1. Systems thinking
-
Wanted & unwanted consequences - Failing to consider that actions have both intended and unintended consequences. Includes failing to consider secondary and higher order consequences and inevitable implications.
- By solving one problem, we generate another one and sometimes create an even worse one.
-
The whole system - Failing to consider the whole system in which actions and reactions take place, the important factors that make up the system, their relationships and effects of changes on system outcome.
- Try to optimize the whole and not a system’s individual parts. Think through what other variables may change when we alter a factor in a system.
-
Reactions of others - Failing to consider the likely reactions of others - what is best to do may depend on what others do.
-
The winner’s curse - Failing to consider the implications of winning a bid - overestimating value and paying too much.
-
Auction: What you won was the right to pay more for something than everyone else thought it was worth.
-
The other party is most likely to accept our offer when it is least favorable to us.
-
-
Predictions - Overestimating predictive ability or using unknowable factors in making predictions.
-
Nobody can forecast interest or currency rates, the GDP, turning points in the economy, the stock market, etc. Massive amounts of information don’t help.
-
“We try and predict what individual investments will swim well in relation to the tide. And then we tend to accept the effects of the tide as those effects fall.” - Charles Munger
-
2. Scale and limits
-
Scale of size and time - Failing to consider that changes in size or time influence form, function and behavior.
- Adding $20k to the payroll should be evaluated as a $3M decision, over lifetime, factoring in raises, benefits, and other expenses.
-
Breakpoints, critical thresholds or limits - Failing to consider breakpoints, critical thresholds or limits
- Advantage of scale: In some businesses, things cascade toward the overwhelming dominance of one firm - to a winner-take-all situation.
-
Size and frequency - The frequency of some events and attributes are inversely proportional to their size.
- Warren Buffett says: “It is not necessary to do extraordinary things to get extraordinary results.”
-
Constraints - Failing to consider constraints - that a system’s performance is constrained by its weakest link.
- In many business activities a few things can produce much of the value.
Ask: How do we allocate our time, work, attention and money? Can we identify the few things that really matter?
3. Causes
-
Large effects - Not understanding what causes desired results.
-
Random events - Believing cause resembles its effect - that a big effect must have a big or complicated cause.
-
Acting on symptoms - Underestimating the influence of randomness in bad or good outcomes.
-
Mistaking correlation for cause - Mistaking an effect for its cause. Includes failing to consider that many effects may originate from one common root cause.
-
Multiple causes - Attributing outcome to a single cause when there are multiple causes.
-
Alternative explanations - Failing to consider that an outcome may be consistent with alternative explanations.
-
Selective data - Drawing conclusions about causes from selective data. Includes identifying the wrong cause because it seems the obvious one based on a single observed effect. Also failing to consider information or evidence that is missing.
-
There is nothing more deceptive than an obvious fact.
-
Obviousness is always the enemy to correctness.
-
“Life is hard,” he retorted, “Compared to what?” We tend to ignore alternatives, and therefore we fail to make appropriate comparisons.
-
-
Appropriate comparisons - Not comparing the difference in conditions, behavior and factors between negative and positive outcomes in similar situations when explaining an outcome.
4. Numbers and their meaning
-
Use basic math to count, quantify, and understand relationships - Looking at isolated numbers - failing to consider relationships and magnitudes. Includes not using basic math to count and quantity. Also not differentiating between relative and absolute risk.
-
The effect of exponential growth - Underestimating the effect of exponential growth.
-
The time value of money - Underestimating the time value of money.
5. Probabilities and number of possible outcomes
-
Underestimating risk exposure in situations where relative frequency (or comparable data) and/or magnitude of consequences is unknown or changing over time.
-
Number of possible outcomes - Underestimating the number of possible outcomes for unwanted events. Includes underestimating the probability and severity of rare or extreme events.
-
Low frequency events - Overestimating the chance of rare but widely publicized and highly emotional events and underestimating the chance of common but less publicized events.
- Most people think dramatically, not quantitatively.
-
Mathematical expectation -Failing to consider both probabilities and consequences (expected value).
-
Chance has no memory -Believing events where chance plays a role are self-correcting - that previous outcomes of independent events have predictive value in determining future outcomes.
- If we get a once in 100-year storm this year, another big one could happen next year. There is a 1% chance that the event will happen in any given year. There is no memory of the past.
-
Controlling chance events - Believing one can control the outcome of events where chance is involved.
-
People were more reluctant to give up a lottery ticket they had chosen themselves, than one selected at random for them.
-
The lesson is, if you want to sell lottery tickets, let people choose their own numbers instead of randomly drawing them.
-
-
Gains, losses and utility - Judging financial decisions by evaluating gains and losses instead of final state of wealth and personal value.
-
The consequences of low frequency events -
-
The consequences of being wrong - Failing to consider the consequences of being wrong.
-
We should never risk something we have and need for something we don’t need.
-
You only have to get rich once. The added money has no utility whatsoever.
-
6. Scenarios
-
Systems construction and planning processes - Overestimating the probability of scenarios where all of a series of steps must be achieved for a wanted outcome. Also underestimating opportunities for failure and what normally happens in similar situations.
- It’s not that easy to make lots of money in a business in a capitalistic society. There are people that are looking at what you’re doing every day and trying to figure out a way to do it better, underprice you, bring out a better product or whatever it may be.
-
Systems failure and accidents - Underestimating the probability of systems failure - scenarios composed of many parts where system failure can happen one way or another. Includes failing to consider that time horizon changes probabilities. Also assuming independence when it is not present and/or assuming events are equally likely when they are not.
-
Safety factor - Not adding a factor of safety for known and unknown risks. Size of factor depends on the consequences of failure, how well the risks are understood, systems characteristics and degree of control.
- Simplify and standardize processes, and use checklists to decrease the likelihood of operator errors.
7. Coincidences and miracles
-
Coincidences - Underestimating that surprises and improbable events happen, somewhere, sometime, to someone, if they have enough opportunities (large enough size or time) to happen.
- The most astonishingly incredible coincidence imaginable would be the complete absence of all coincidences.
-
Making up causes for chance events - Looking for meaning, searching for causes and making up patterns for chance events, especially events that have emotional implications.
-
Believing in miracles - Failing to consider cases involving the absence of a cause or effect.
-
We pay no attention to times when nothing happens. We shouldn’t find significance in amazing past events.
-
It’s easy to be a prophet. You make twenty-five predictions and the ones that come true are the ones you talk about.
-
Nobody keeps a record of their erroneous prophecies since they are infinite and everyday.
-
If the opposite of a given statement is more I likely, the statement is probably false.
-
Mysteries are not necessarily miracles.
-
8. Reliability of case evidence
- Prior probabilities - Overweighing individual case evidence and under-weighing the prior probability (probability estimate of an event before considering new evidence that might change it) considering for example, the base rate (relative frequency of an attribute or event in a representative comparison group), or evidence from many similar cases. Includes failing to consider the probability of a random matth, and the probability of a false positive and false negative. Also failing to consider a relevant comparison population that bears the characteristic we are seeking.
9. Misrepresentative evidence
-
Conditions, environments and cirumstances change - Failing to consider changes in factors, context or conditions when using past evidence to predict likely future outcomes. Includes not searching for explanations to why past outcome happened, what is required to make past record continue, and what forces can change it.
-
If you could make money based on what has worked the past 20 years, all of the richest people would be librarians.
-
The man who fed the chicken every day wrings its neck instead. The past is a good guide to the future - but not always.
-
-
The single case or unrepresentative samples - Overestimating evidence from a single case or small or unrepresentative samples.
- We’d rather be roughly right than precisely wrong. In other words, if something is terribly important, we’ll guess at it rather than just make our judgment based on what happens to be easily countable.
-
Chance and performance - Underestimating the influence of chance in performance (success and failure).
- No victor believes in chance.
-
Ignoring failures - Only seeing positive outcomes - paying little or no attention to negative outcomes and prior probabilities.
- We give too little attention to failures.
-
Variability - Failing to consider variability of outcomes and their frequency.
-
Effects of regression - Failing to consider regression - in any series of events where chance is involved unique outcomes tends to regress back to the average outcome.
PART FOUR - GUIDELINES TO BETTER THINKING
1. Models of reality
Developing the habit of mastering the multiple models which underlie reality is the best thing you can do.. .It’s just so much fun - and it works so well.
Ask:
- What is the underlying big idea?
- Do I understand its application in practical life?
- Does it help me understand the world?
- How does it work?
- Why does it work?
- Under what conditions does it work?
- How reliable is it?
- What are its limitations?
-
How does it relate to other models?
-
What characterizes a useful model? -
Eg. A useful idea from chemistry is autocatalysis: If you get a certain kind of process going on in chemistry, it speeds up on it’s own. You accomplish A - and, all of a sudden, you’re getting A + B + C for a while.
Disney and Coke are good examples of autocatalysis, where they prospered when the video casette and refrigeration where invented.
A valuable model produces meaningful explanations and predictions of likely future consequences where the cost of being wrong is high.
A model should be simple to use. If it is complicated, we don’t use it.
-
Considering many ideas help us achieve a holistic view. -
Since no single discipline has all the answers, we need to understand and use the big ideas from all the important disciplines - mathematics, physics, chemistry, engineering, biology, psychology, and rank and use them in order of their reliability.
If you don’t have the full repertoire of models, you’ll overutilize the limited repertoire you have - including use of models that are inappropriate just because they’re available to you in the limited stock you have in mind.
Have a full kit of tools. Go through them in your mind checklist-style.
Find connections between ideas. Derive new ideas from these connections.
We can combine ideas from different disciplines. The ideas of scaling from mathematics, systems and constraints from physics, and competitive advantage from microeconomics often explain how business value is created or destroyed.
We can try to see relationships between phenomena, and try to find one principle that can explain them all. Maxwell combined in one model the laws of electricity and magnetism with the laws of behavior of light. This single model explained optical, electrical and magnetic phenomena.
We can find similarities or functional equivalents within or between disciplines. The functional equivalent of viscosity from chemistry is stickiness in economics.
-
How to learn an idea so it sticks to our memory? -
-
One sentence explanation
Feynman’s explanation of scientific knowledge in a sentence is All things are made up of atoms - little particles that move around in perpetual motion, attracting each other when they are a little distance apart, but repelling upon being squeezed into one another
Psychology - We get what we reward for.
-
Give it a hook
Associate the model with a dramatic real-life story, analogy, individual, or picture.
-
-
Search for explanations -
One way of forcing us to learn models tis to open our eyes and look at things we see around us and ask “why” things are happening.
There are no foolish questions and no man becomes a fool until he has stopped asking questions.
All knowledge is subject to change as new evidence arrives. This means we have to continuously learn and re-learn.
The people who use their brains don’t lose them.
2. Meaning
Bad terminology is the enemy of good thinking.
To understand meaning, ask basic questions:
Meaning of words:
What do the words mean? What do they imply? Do they Anything? Can we translate words, ideas or statements into an ordinary n that tells us something? An expression is always relative. We have to 1d measure it against something.
Meaning of an event:
What effect is produced? What is really happening using T words? What is it doing? What is accomplished? Under what Ins does it happen? What else does it mean?
Causes:
What is happening here and why? Is this working? Why or why not? i that happen? Why does it work here but not there? How can it What are the mechanisms behind? What makes it happen?
Implications:
What is the consequence of this observation, event, or :e? What does that imply?
Purpose:
Why should we do that? Why do I want this to happen?
Reason:
Why is this better than that?
Usefulness:
What is the applicability of this? Does it mean anything in relation want to achieve?
“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” - Einstein
We use the risk-free rate merely to equate one item to another. In other words, we’re looking for whatever is the most attractive. In order to estimate the present value of anything, we’re going to use a number. And, obviously, we can always buy government bonds. Therefore, that becomes the yardstick rate to simply compare all kinds of investment opportunities across the spectrum: oil wells, farms, whatever it may be.
Value is an estimate rather than a precise figure.
Using precise numbers is, in fact, foolish; working with a range of possibilities is the better approach.
Look at all the cash a business will produce between now and judgment day and discount it back to the present using an appropriate discount rate and buy a lot cheaper than that.
Money doesn’t know where it comes from. There’s no sense in paying more for a glamorous business if you’re getting the same amount of money.
What counts in investing is not how much they know, but rather how realistically they define what they don’t know.
We love owning common stocks - if they can be purchased at attractive prices… Unless, however, we see a very high probability of at least 10% pre-tax returns, we will sit on the sidelines.
John estimates that he can take out $300,000 in cash every year. Knowing he can always buy a risk-free government bond, John uses a bond rate of 6% as the discount rate. He also knows he can reinvest whatever cash he can take out from the store at 6%. The value of the store is then $5 million ($300,000/0.06). If John’s required rate of return is 10%, the value of the store is $3 million.
If you can pinpoint it, you’re kidding yourself. You’d be amazed at how inexact we are.
The margin of safety ought to be so attractive. The decision should be obvious.
If we simply don’t know what’s going to happen in the future, we just give up. We only buy businesses about which we’re quite certain.
In hiring, look for three things: intelligence, energy, and character. If they don’t have the last one, the first two will kill you.
When a management with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business with a reputation for poor fundamental economics, it is the reputation of the business that remains intact.
3. Simplification
Make fewer and better decisions. Why? Because it forces us to think more on each decision and thereby reduces our chance of mistakes.
The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook.
Often we try to get too much information, including misinformation, or information of no use to explain or predict. We also focus on details and what’s irrelevant or unknowable and overlook the obvious truths. Dealing with what’s important forces us to prioritize. There are often just a few actions that produce most of what we are trying to achieve.
There are huge dangers in getting too caught up in the minutiae of using a computer so that you miss the organized common sense.
After 25 years, I have not learned how to solve difficult business problems. What we have learned to avoid them.
In both business and investments it is usually far more profitable to simply stick with the easy and obvious than it is to resolve the difficult.
A good business throws up one easy decision after another, whereas a bad one gives you horrible choices - decisions that are extremely hard to make.
To do two things at once is to do neither.
Decisions: Is it knowable? Is it important?
“The formulation of a problem is often more essential than its solution, which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skill.” - Albert Einstein
Start with basic questions like: What does it mean? What is the simplest example? What is the number one question? How can I tell if the answer is right? Can I come up with an example that makes it clear what the problem is?
Buffett’s genius was largely a genius of character - of patience, discipline and rationality. His talent sprang from his unrivaled independence of mind and ability to focus on his work and shut out the world.
If you feel like you have to invest every day, you’re going to make a lot of mistakes. Wait for the fat pitch.
A few major opportunities, clearly recognizable as such, will usually come to one who continuously searches and waits, with a curious mind.
4. Rules and filters
Walk away from anything I don’t understand or cant quantify or doesn’t work. Only deal with people I trust.
Extraordinary discipline does not eliminate losses; it does prevent foolish losses.
We can say no in 10 seconds to 90%+ of all things, simply because we have these filters.
Evaluate new business ideas, use 4 criteria as filters:
- Can I understand it?
- Does it look like it has some kind of sustainable competitive advantage?
- Is the management composed of able and honest people?
- Is the price right?
Understanding is thinking that we have a reasonable probability of being able to assess where the business will be in 10 years.
If there are very important items that aren’t on your checklist, you can crash.
A checklist must include each critical item necessary for “safety” and avoiding “accidents” so we don’t need to rely on memory for items to be checked
5. Goals
TEXT
6. Alternatives
Opportunity cost. Our time and money are limited. If we make a decision to do one thing we are deciding not to do some other available thing. Every minute we choose to spend on one thing is a minute unavailable to spend on other things. Every dollar we invest is a dollar unavailable for other available investments. If we decide to spend money today instead of investing for the future we give up the opportunity to spend more in the future. If I decide to play golf today I miss the opportunity to finish this book on time.
Warren Buffett tells us what to look for in a spouse: “Look for someone who will love you unconditionally and will subtly encourage you to be better than you thought you can be.”
Some decisions have a greater influence on our lives. A decision that will influence our lives ten years from now is far more important than one that will influence us only today. But if we choose the wrong spouse, education, career, friends, or investment, it may haunt us a long, long time.
7. Consequences
Whenever someone makes an assertion to you, is to always ask, “And then what?” Ask it about everything.
Projections with the amount you’ll save don’t do the second step - to determine how much is going to stay home and how much is just going to flow through to the customer. The benefit of the cost reductions didn’t go to the guy who bought the equipment.
Some systems should be made deliberately a little unfair if they carry better consequences for us all.
With the Navy Model there’s no excuse. Very simply, if your ship goes aground, your career is over. It doesn’t matter whether it was your fault or not. Nobody’s interested in your fault. It’s just a rule for the good of all, all effects considered. Civilization works better with some of these no-fault rules. Considering the net benefit, I don’t care if one captain has some unfairness in his life.
8. Quantification
How can we evaluate if a decision is intelligent or not if we can’t measure it against a relevant and important yardstick? Some things can’t be measured exactly, so estimating a range is the next best alternative.
Everybody overweighs the stuff that can be numbered, because it yields to the statistical techniques they’re taught in academia. The hard-to-measure stuff may be more important.
The best business to own is one that over an extended period can employ large amounts of incremental capital at very high rates of return.
Be suspicious of companies that trumpet earnings projections and growth expectations. Businesses seldom operate in a tranquil, no-surprise environment, and earnings simply don’t advance smoothly (except in the offering books of investment bankers). We’re suspicious of those CEOs who claim to know the future - and we become downright incredulous if they consistently reach their declared targets. Managers that always promise to “make the numbers” will at some point be tempted to make up the numbers.
The more our calculation depends on cash flows far out in the future, the more opportunities there are for unwanted events, and the more uncertain our expected return.
Whether a business sells nails or telecom equipment, if more money is going out than coming in, on a present value basis, it is worthless. Value is destroyed, not created, by any business that loses money over its lifetime, no matter how high its interim valuation may get.
9. Evidence
Do what scientists do: Strive for objectivity. Scientists try to describe the world as it is, not as they want it to be.
Science is the great antidote to the poison of enthusiasm and superstition.
The scientific process involves the following steps:
- Problem or observation. Wonder what happens and why.
- Find a possible solution or an explanation that can be proved or disproved by testing it against experiment and observation.
- Predict consequences - see what would be implied if our guess was right.
- Test - repeat the experiment against error, fraud, coincidence, and change in circumstances or environment. Report results honestly.
It does not make any difference how beautiful your guess is. If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong.
If we don’t “guess why”, there can be no experiments since a test has nothing to guide it.
“All observation must be for or against some view if it is to be of any service.” - Darwin
Have to have some idea of why you’re looking for information. Don’t just collect endless amounts of data and then only later try to make sense of it. You have to start with some ideas of reality. Look to see whether what you’re seeing fits in with that basic thought structure.
Mrs. B. who ran our Furniture Mart. Over a 50-year period, we’d seen her take $ 500 and turn it into a business that made $18 million pretax. So we knew she was competent. The past record is the best single guide.
Then you run into the problem of the 14-year-old horse. Is there anything about the past record that makes it a poor guideline as a forecaster of the future?
Instead of verifying a statement, it is sometimes better to prove it false. A single piece of evidence in favor of a statement does not prove its truth - it only supports it. But a single piece of evidence against it will show that it is false. Albert Einstein said: “No number of experiments can prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong.”
Archaeology: just because something hasn’t been found doesn’t mean it won’t be found.
“Since a lot of evidence agrees with my explanation, I must be right.” Not necessarily, the same evidence may agree with other explanations. Look for evidence that disproves your explanation.
Ask: What test can disprove this?
Engage in self-criticism. Question your assumptions. Explain the opposite of your beliefs. Ask: Assume I’m wrong, how will I know? Why may an opposite theory be correct? Assuming my answer is correct, what would cause me to change my mind? Then, look for that evidence. Often we don’t see our weaknesses and thus are not motivated to improve.
Take your initial assumption and try to disprove it. Automatic tendency in psychology called “first-conclusion bias”. But you can train yourself away from it.
10. Backward thinking
A lot of success comes from knowing what you really want to avoid
Avoid what causes the opposite of what you want to achieve.
If you want to ruin your civilization, pass laws where people can easily cheat. It’s much better to let life be hard - than to create systems that are easy to cheat.
Wise men profit more from fools than fools from wise men; for the wise men shun the mistakes of the fools, but fools do not imitate the successes of the wise.
To reduce mistakes, we should study failures with severe consequences.
Often we learn more from understanding why something doesn’t work than from why it does.
Ask: Why did that happen? Was was the mistake? What circumstances were present? What’s the lesson? How can we create the best conditions to avoid mistakes? How can we prevent causes that can’t be eliminated? How can we limit the consequences and probability?
Assume we’ve achieved our goal, then ask: What was the purpose? Was this what I wanted? What is needed to achieve this? Then work backward to the beginning.
“We need discipline in schools.” What would be the consequences if this statement were false? Turn a statement backwards and show that the opposite is worse. What are the consequences? Unbelievable or negative?
Study evidence that implies the opposite of what is normal and ask “why.” Use “negative” rules - tell people what they can’t do. Practice zero base thinking - start with a clean sheet of paper and ask: If we that we do, how can we best achieve our goal?
11. Risk
We think of business risk in terms of what can happen five, 10 or 15 years from now that will destroy, modify or reduce the economic strengths we believe currently exist in the business. If we can think of very much that can go wrong, we just forget it.
The best way to minimize risk is to think.
I had a relative by marriage who died in his late 80s. And I don’t think he ever had a loss. He only did about eight things in his lifetime. He started with a small poke, and if something wasn’t a near cinch, he didn’t do it. He lived well and died rich. I think it’s possible for a great many people to live a life like that where there isn’t much risk of disaster and where they’re virtually sure to get ahead a reasonable amount. It takes a lot of judgment, a lot of discipline and an absence of hyperactivity. By this method, I think most intelligent people can take a lot of risk out of life.
A single, big mistake could wipe out a long string of successes. We therefore need someone genetically programmed to recognize and avoid serious risks, including those never before encountered.
Temperament is also important. Independent thinking, emotional stability, and a keen understanding of both human and institutional behavior is vital to long-term success.
Ask: What is the cost of being wrong versus the benefit of being right compared to other investment opportunities? Cost: John may lose money, reputation, and experience mental stress. It will also take his focus away from other business. Benefit: Possibility to make more money over a period of time. Alternative: More time to concentrate on the present business or other opportunities.
Consequences: Can I handle them? Are they reversible? In which alternative do I lose less?
12. Attitudes
It’s not that we have so little time but that we waste much of it.
Life, if you know how to use it, is long.
You will hear many men saying, “When I am 50…” - but what guarantee do you have that your life will last longer?
What do we want out of life? The shorter the list, the more likely it is to focus on things that matter.
Know what you understand and what you don’t understand. It’s not how big the circle is. But it’s terribly important that you know where the perimeter is.
Why should we want to play a competitive game in a field where we have no advantage - maybe a disadvantage - instead of playing in a field where we have a clear advantage?
Use your advantages.
Where do I have an edge over others?
If we have nothing to hide, we have nothing to fear.
Would I be willing to see my action described by an informed and critical reporter on the front page?
Act as an exemplar.
Avoid controversies.
Optimists live longer than pessimists.
TAKEAWAYS
Pick out the person you admire the most. Write the reasons why you admire him, then try to figure out why you can’t have the same qualities.
Find the people you don’t like and figure out what you don’t like about them. Ask yourself if you have some of those qualities in you.
When an owner auctions off his business, exhibiting a total lack of interest in what follows, you will frequently find that it has been dressed up for sale. If owners behave with little regard for their business, their conduct will often contaminate attitudes and practices throughout the company.
The expert tends only to use models from one’s own segment of a discipline, ignoring or underweighing others. Overconfident misuse.
Good ideas cause more mischief than bad ideas. It is so easy to push a good idea to wretched excess. Mix in a little social proof, and brains turn to mush.
Advantage of scale can be an informational advantage. If I go to some remote place, I may see Wrigley gum alongside Glotz’s gum. I don’t know anything about Glotz’s. So if one is $0.40 and one is $0.30, am I going to take something I don’t know and put it in my mouth - which is a pretty personal place - all for a lousy dime?
If everybody’s buying something, we think it’s better. We don’t like to be the one guy who’s out of step.
A magazine about Motorcross (for example) is a total necessity to fans of that. Its profit margins would make you salivate. Narrowcast publishing. Occasionally, scaling down and intensifying gives you the big advantage. Bigger is not always better.
In a bureaucracy, you think the work is done when it goes out of your inbox into someone else’s inbox.
HOW TO GET WORLDLY WISDOM: You need a latticework of mental models. Hang your actual experience and vicarious experience (books, etc) on this latticework of powerful models. With that system, things gradually fit together in a way that enhances cognition. You need the best 100 or so models from microeconomics, physiology, psychology, elementary mathematics, hard science, engineering, and so on. You don’t have to be an expert in any of those. Take the really big ideas and learn them early and well. You have to learn the models so that they become part of your ever-used repertoire.
3 TIMELESS IDEAS FOR INVESTING:
- Look at stocks as part-ownership of a business
- Look at market fluctuations as your friend by profiting from folly rather than participating in it.
- Margin of safety. It seems like a waste to get a PhD in Economics and have it all come back to that. There’s a tendency to overlook anything that simple and important.
HOW TO EVALUATE BUSINESSES:
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
- How certain are you that there are birds in the bush?
- When will they emerge and how many will there be?
- What is the risk-free interest rate (yield on long-term bonds)? Answer these three questions, and you’ll know the maximum value of the bush - and the maximum number of birds that should be offered for it. This applies to outlays for farms, oil royalties, bonds, stocks, lottery tickets, and manufacturing plants. Just insert the correct numbers, and you can rank the attractiveness of all possible uses of capital throughout the universe.
If the buyer cares little about whose product or distribution services he uses, industry economics are certain to be unexciting, or even disastrous.
This works with candy bars: customers buy by brand name, not by asking for a “two-ounce candy bar”. But it doesn’t work with sugar: people don’t ask for “a coffee with cream and C&H Sugar”.
SIMPLICITY:
I don’t like difficult problems. People think that if they just hire somebody with the apppropriate labels, they can do something very difficult. That is one of the most dangerous ideas a human being can have. All kinds of things can create problems by causing complexity. At least make fewer mistakes than people who think they can do anything, no matter how complex, by just hiring somebody with a credible label. You don’t have to hire out your thinking if you keep it simple.
The big thing to do is avoid being wrong.