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For example, usually asking someone out on a date has huge asymmetric upside. You might hit it off and end up being in a happy relationship. If not, you'd just be a little embarrassed and maybe awkward with the person afterward. Investing in call options on AMD in 2014 or Tesla in 2019 also had huge asymmetric upside. It was clear that these stocks had massive risks, but while the upside was potentially huge, the downside was capped at -100%. What other examples are there? Also welcome examples of things with asymmetric downside like texting while driving. |
This includes: applying to competitive positions when you don't seem completely qualified, cold calls in sales (sales seems to be heavily based on asymmetric upside, where sales people call many different people until they get a few Yes-s), and asking people to hang out just to make friends.
More related to money, I've thought that cheap (and often free) educational material to have a large potential upside. Good books are often time well-spent, as long as there is enough time spent applying the concepts too. A cheap online course on video editing (I think about $10 USD at the time) has also come in handy many times.