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CONCEPT

The Plan-Then-Act Fallacy

The conventional career-counseling sequence — reflect, plan, then act — that Ibarra's research has systematically refuted and that the AI age has made not just ineffective but actively dangerous.
The career counselor's office, whether physical or virtual, has operated on a stable set of assumptions for half a century. The process goes: first reflect, then plan, then execute the plan. The sequence sounds responsible. It sounds rational. It appeals to the part of us that believes important decisions should be made deliberately, with full information, after careful analysis. Ibarra's research across three decades has demonstrated that this sequence is not merely suboptimal — it is backwards. And the AI revolution has made its backwardness not just intellectually interesting but practically dangerous, because the people who follow the conventional advice — who try to figure out who they want to become before they begin experimenting — will find themselves paralyzed at precisely the moment when paralysis is most costly. The correct sequence, Ibarra argues, begins with action, generates outsight through experimentation, and produces the reflective clarity that plan-then-act assumed had to come first.
The Plan-Then-Act Fallacy
The Plan-Then-Act Fallacy

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