New Book Summary: How Big Things Get Done by Bent Flyvbjerg and Dan Gardner


Why did the Sydney Opera House ruin its architect’s career? What can we learn about megaprojects from Pixar’s movies? My latest book summary is for How Big Things Get Done by Bent Flyvbjerg and Dan Gardner, which explores why so many megaprojects are disasters and how to prevent these failures.

As usual, the key takeaways are below, and you can find the full summary by clicking the link above.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Most megaprojects fail. Less than 1% of megaprojects come in on time, on budget, and deliver the claimed benefits.
  • Planning is essential to a megaproject’s success:
    • Megaprojects are typically rushed, with only superficial or slapdash plans. There’s often an action bias — people want to see “shovels in the ground”.
    • Some argue that we underestimate our creativity under pressure, and that planning just leads to paralysis. But the data doesn’t support this.
    • Others argue that planning obstructs creativity. However, the authors argue planning enables creativity as you can experiment during the planning stage, which is relatively cheap.
  • How to plan well — good planning is:
    • Broad. Start by asking what your goal is. Projects are a means to a goal, not a goal in themselves. Are there other ways of achieving your goal?
    • Slow and detailed. Detailed planning may be expensive in absolute terms, but cheap relative to delivery. You want to flush out as many problems as possible in the planning stage. Bad planning leaves problems to be figured out at the delivery stage.
    • Active. Planning is not just sitting and abstractly thinking about what you’ll do. It’s about making a model or simulation, testing it and refining it.
    • Risk mitigation. You can study the black swans that tend to come up in your type of project and plan for them. One way is to simply reduce the project’s duration, leaving less time for black swans to crop up.
  • Experience is underrated, usually for two reasons:
    • Domestic bias. Politicians prefer to award contracts to local companies to create local jobs, instead of outsourcing to foreign companies who have the relevant experience.
    • Uniqueness bias. We like words like “biggest”, “unique” or “bespoke”, but we should really be wary of them because anything unique is inexperienced.
  • The megaprojects that go wrong can go really wrong (the distribution is “fat-tailed”).
    • However, modularity can reduce risks. If you can break down your project into smaller, repeatable chunks, you can learn as you go and things won’t get too far off track even if you screw up.
    • Modularity is a matter of degree. Some people are now looking at ways to make traditionally non-modular projects like nuclear or hydroelectric dams more modular.

As usual, you can find the full detailed summary on the website. If you found this summary useful, consider forwarding to a friend that might enjoy it—especially if they're leading a megaproject!

Thanks for subscribing! Until next time,

To Summarise

ToSummarise.com

I summarise non-fiction books with more detail and critical analysis than you'll find elsewhere. Join my newsletter to get new summaries delivered straight to your inbox!

Read more from ToSummarise.com

I've just published a summary for The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations by Daniel Yergin. The book is a bit of a denser read, explaining how changes in energy markets are reshaping geopolitics, but I found it highly educational. As usual, the key takeaways are below, and you can find the full summary by clicking the link above. KEY TAKEAWAYS Energy is a major driver of geopolitics. The shale revolution beginning in the 2010s has made the US into an energy superpower. Shale...

I'm back after a short break with a new summary for The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters by Priya Parker. Great gatherings have so much potential to deepen our social connections and enrich our lives, yet so many gatherings frankly kind of suck. It's worth a read even if you've never thought of yourself as much of a “gatherer”. As usual, the key takeaways are below, and you can find the full summary by clicking the link above. KEY TAKEAWAYS Gatherings don’t have to suck. But...

March was a quieter month with only 2 book summaries: Why We’re Polarized by Ezra Klein (25 mins) — published in 2020, Ezra Klein looks at how US politics got to be so polarized. A Hacker’s Mind by Bruce Schneier (25 mins) — Schneier applies his background in computer security to looking at how market, legal, political, and cognitive systems can also be "hacked". I'm also planning to take some time off next month, so I'll see you in May! Thanks for subscribing and until next time, To Summarise