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Plan B «POPULAR – 2024»

Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air chronicles a tragic example of Plan B failure. Multiple commercial expeditions failed because climbers treated their "guide" and "supplies" as a safety net, encouraging risk-taking. More critically, the absence of a pre-negotiated, asymmetric Plan B (e.g., "turn-around time is absolute, regardless of summit proximity") led to catastrophic decisions. The climbers had a de facto Plan B (rescue by other teams), which was not a true contingency but a hope. This illustrates the : believing an external bailout exists when it does not.

The Strategic Paradox of Plan B: Safeguarding Failure or Enabling Resilience? plan b

Traditional risk management posits that all significant risks should be identified, assessed, and mitigated—often via a Plan B (Knight, 1921). However, strategic management theory (e.g., Porter’s competitive strategy) emphasizes commitment. Porter (1980) argued that clear, irreversible commitments signal credibility to competitors and stakeholders. Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air chronicles a tragic

The colloquial term "Plan B" originated in the mid-20th century as a simple synonym for an alternative course of action. In an unpredictable world characterized by volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity (VUCA), having a fallback seems self-evidently prudent. Yet, organizations and individuals frequently fail to develop effective contingencies, or worse, their Plan B actively sabotages their primary strategy. This paper seeks to answer: By dissecting the psychology of backup planning and the structural requirements of redundancy, this paper provides a framework for constructing effective contingency plans. The climbers had a de facto Plan B

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