"80/20 rule should be 90/10"- an opinion
I recently tried to explain to a co-worker the 80/20 rule. How 20% of our activities result in 80% of our gains.
While reading articles on Behance site I came across a 40-30-30 rule in an article by Michael Schwalbe. It was relating to ski training. The author suggested that 40% is physical training. During this phase you are suppose to fail daily. You are trying to get your body to perform something that is new so failure is expected.
The other 60% was mental training. Of this percentage, 30% was technical skill and experience. With practice you gain both.
The other 30% is where you take harder risks and increase the chances of failure. However, you will not fail as often even though you are outside of your comfort zone.
"Only by trying something new, struggling, learning, and then trying again do we improve our performance. It is simply acclimating to unchartered territory"
Interesting rule...
Today's question is:
"Does the 40-30-30 rule fit your experience?"
I recently tried to explain to a co-worker the 80/20 rule. How 20% of our activities result in 80% of our gains.
While reading articles on Behance site I came across a 40-30-30 rule in an article by Michael Schwalbe. It was relating to ski training. The author suggested that 40% is physical training. During this phase you are suppose to fail daily. You are trying to get your body to perform something that is new so failure is expected.
The other 60% was mental training. Of this percentage, 30% was technical skill and experience. With practice you gain both.
The other 30% is where you take harder risks and increase the chances of failure. However, you will not fail as often even though you are outside of your comfort zone.
"Only by trying something new, struggling, learning, and then trying again do we improve our performance. It is simply acclimating to unchartered territory"
Interesting rule...
Today's question is:
"Does the 40-30-30 rule fit your experience?"
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