How Big Things Get Done

The Surprising Factors That Determine the Fate of Every Project, from Home Renovations to Space Exploration and Everything In Between

Bent Flyvbjerg & Dan Gardner

Recommended By

Book Synopsis

"How Big Things Get Done" by Bent Flyvbjerg and Dan Gardner explores the process of making large-scale initiatives successful. The book delves into the reasons behind the failure of mega-projects and offers insights on how to navigate the complexities and uncertainties that accompany them.

Flyvbjerg and Gardner discuss various case studies, drawing from diverse sectors such as transportation, technology, and urban planning. They highlight the common traps and biases that often lead to cost overruns, schedule delays, and performance failures in large projects. The authors bring attention to the planning fallacy, optimism bias, and strategic misrepresentation, among other factors that contribute to project mismanagement.

The book provides a comprehensive framework for understanding and addressing these challenges. By emphasizing the importance of accurate data, rigorous analysis, and realistic estimation, Flyvbjerg and Gardner propose ways to improve decision-making and project governance. They argue that incorporating more transparency and accountability can help prevent significant failures in mega-projects.

In addition, the authors explore the role of power and politics within these large initiatives. They highlight the influence of stakeholders, both from within and outside the organization, on project outcomes. By analyzing key players and their motivations, the book offers strategies to effectively manage complex relationships and navigate power dynamics.

"How Big Things Get Done" offers valuable insights for project managers, policymakers, and anyone involved in steering large-scale initiatives. It provides a roadmap for overcoming the challenges inherent in mega-projects by adopting a more realistic and evidence-based approach. The book's combination of in-depth analysis, practical advice, and real-world examples makes it an essential resource for tackling the complexities of getting big things done.

Explore More Books

See All
A Splendid Exchange
Hate Inc.
The Hot Hand
Fate Is The Hunter
Tenth of December
The Demon Under The Microscope
The Internet of Money Volume 2
San Fransicko
Misbehaving
Troublemakers
Probability Theory
Stalin's War
Bass Culture
Getting Everything You Can Out of All You've Got
The Romance of American Communism
Art of the Living Dead
The Cult of LEGO
How To Shoot Video That Doesn't Suck
The Contrary Farmer
The Dice Man
On Drugs
Rick and Morty Book Four
The Upright Thinkers
Psychopolitics
Food of the Gods
Cuckoo
How to Be Topp
Merchants of Doubt
Age Of Ambition
The Wages of Guilt
Forged in Crisis
The Network State
Lolita
Decoded
The Art of Seduction
Scientific Freedom
Blood and Thunder
God Emperor of Dune
Healing
The Araboolies of Liberty Street
The Formula
Old Man and the Sea
The Hunger Games
Portraits of Interiors
Tree Crops
The Narrow Corridor
Letters from a Stoic
Binti
Inside Trump's White House
Freakonomics
Obsession
The DevOps Handbook
Starlink
Exponential Organizations
The Price of Peace
Natural Capitalism
Physics of the Impossible
100 Deadly Skills
This Brave New World
Roger Ailes: Off Camera
The Age of Surveillance Capitalism
Men, Machines, and Modern Times
Ender's Game
Born To Run
Stealing Fire
The Reasonableness of Christianity
Prime Movers of Globalization
Blankie
Farmer's Progress
Childhood and Society
American Exceptionalism
The Graveyard Book
All The Light We Cannot See
Other People's Money
The Politics Industry
Am I Being Too Subtle?
In The Plex
The 5 Resets
No Rules Rules
The Sense of Style
The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need
The Ambiguities of Experience
Facing Codependence
That Used To Be Us
Elvis Cole Series
A Fighting Chance
Impro
Euclid's Elements
The Devil in the White City
The Art of People
Abundance
The Gift of Adversity
Battlegrounds
Trillion Dollar Triage
Wake Up to the Joy of You
The Strange Death Of Europe
A Few Lessons from Sherlock Holmes
The Stopwatch Gang
What Technology Wants
Go To