Sustainability
The practice of designing and implementing processes, systems, or business solutions in a way that ensures their long-term viability, efficiency, and maintainability.
The practice of designing and implementing processes, systems, or business solutions in a way that ensures their long-term viability, efficiency, and maintainability.
The phenomenon where people have a reduced ability to recall the last items in a list when additional, unrelated information is added at the end.
A Japanese term meaning "continuous improvement," focusing on small, incremental changes to enhance processes and products.
A method for organizing information based on five categories: category, time, location, alphabet, and continuum.
A strategic planning tool that focuses on outcomes and objectives rather than specific features, allowing for flexibility in achieving goals.
A quick and often temporary fix applied to a software product to address an urgent issue without going through the full development cycle.
A cognitive bias where people attribute greater value to outcomes that required significant effort to achieve.
A cognitive bias where people focus on the most noticeable or prominent information while ignoring less conspicuous details.
A cognitive bias where individuals interpret others' behaviors as having hostile intent, even when the behavior is ambiguous or benign.