The best and most correct answer among the choices provided by the question is the fourth choice "this is an example of causation"
Causation<span> is the "causal relationship between conduct and result". That is to say that</span>causation<span> provides a means of connecting conduct with a resulting effect, typically an injury.</span>
I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
<span><span>Demonstrate Incremental Benefits…All The Time.<span>Taking on long-term projects is dangerous. Sponsors change. Markets change. New technology comes out. If you’re working on a multi-year transformation, you need to demonstrate incremental wins and have clear milestones. You should assume you don’t have the next round of funding and build for success at each point. I could say this is using an Agile approach, but it’s more than that. </span></span><span>FOCUS, FOCUS, FOCUS. <span>This one probably seems so obvious from the outside looking in, but it’s easy to get carried away with trying to take on too much. In this particular case, we thought we had a 3-year timeframe to build and deliver on the vision. We created a vision of care coordination that was really innovative, but we knew that no one had pulled it off before. We then tried to coordinate care coordination and cost management which also hadn’t been done. It would have been better to deliver one thing at a time and make ourselves incredibly sticky in that area.
IF NOT SORRY</span></span></span>