Intertemporal Choice
The study of how people make choices about what and how much to do at various points in time, often involving trade-offs between costs and benefits occurring at different times.
The study of how people make choices about what and how much to do at various points in time, often involving trade-offs between costs and benefits occurring at different times.
The accumulated consequences of poor design decisions, which can hinder future development and usability.
The process of breaking down decisions into smaller, manageable stages to simplify the decision-making process.
SAFe is a framework designed to scale agile practices across large organizations by integrating agile and lean principles.
A cognitive bias where people judge the likelihood of an event based on its relative size rather than absolute probability.
A group of stakeholders that regularly meet to discuss and guide the development and strategy of a product or product line.
A decision-making paradox that shows people's preferences can violate the expected utility theory, highlighting irrational behavior.
Data points that represent an individual's, team's, or company's performance in the sales process.
A statistical technique that uses random sampling and statistical modeling to estimate mathematical functions and simulate systems.