Social Sciences, asked by khushi0001212, 5 months ago

"Planning should be flexible." - Explain​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Flexible planning is a context-reactive, environment-adaptive organization of plans that facilitates development and growth. As a complementary approach, it is non-rigid, unconditional, non-iterative. Flexible planning implies evading hierarchies of plans and issue-trees.

Explanation:

hope it helps you dear

Answered by Anonymous
4

Answer:

In planning, flexibility means that everybody knows exactly what goal they are trying to achieve, but also that the path to it is not carved in stone (especially when it comes to software development). There are too many variables that can not be predicted – development can take longer than expected, user feedback can turn everything upside-down, core ideas themselves can change during the process. I’m sure you’ve seen it happen.

Business plans formed the core of every starting enterprise some years ago. It wasn’t about your 30-second pitch. It was all about the length and depth of your Excel sheet – how many employees are you going to have in 3 years? What do you mean you don’t know? Are you prepared at all?!

Don’t get me wrong, a well thought out business plan is still a good tool, but not for proving a concept, and not for a basis for planning. It’s great for flexing your brain and for going through different scenarios and business models. It’s great when it helps you realize that a new BMW after the first year in business might not be such a good idea. But you shouldn’t invest too much time in predicting the future. It’s better to start building the future step-by-step.

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