Add DMNews to your Google News feed. There’s a fine line between regret and satisfaction when it comes to life decisions. Regret tends to creep in when we make choices out of fear, haste or ignorance.
The longer it takes to get to the answers, the greater the likelihood of a biased answer. Instead of Insights influencing ...
Across cultures and continents, most people prefer to tackle life’s toughest choices alone, trusting their own gut or inner voice over the counsel of friends or the wisdom of the crowd, according to a ...
Running a company doesn’t leave much room for hobbies. But if you know me, you know I make time for one obsession: rituals. My fascination with rituals started from a conversation with my friend Bing ...
Professionals don’t experience uncertainty in decision making — as an amateur, I “knew” this. Before I worked in a medical center, I thought medicine was an exact science: Doctors were trained to ...
You’ve likely heard someone say something along the lines of, “You only have one life to live. Make the most out of it.” It’s sound advice that many of us tend to overlook, not realizing its value.
Great leaders aren’t defined by how many decisions they make, but by the discipline to make fewer, better ones. Effective leadership is defined by the quality and impact of decisions, not the number ...
While some choices are easy to make, like what to eat for dinner, others are more difficult. Think: anything related to moving, relationships or work. Now, science has narrowed down exactly which life ...
We need to follow a decision through the valleys until we get back to high ground. Iworked with a vice-president of a major corporation who was a great decision maker. “You make such good decisions.
We are currently performing a cluster randomized trial of an interdisciplinary, quality-improvement intervention to enhance palliative care in the ICUs of 15 hospitals in the Seattle-Tacoma, WA, area.