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âIf everybody is thinking alike, then somebody isnât thinking.â â General George S. Patton, Jr.
We could all make better decisions.
Whether it involves buying or selling an investment, hiring an employee, or considering an important life choice, making better decisions produces non-linear returns. Repeated bad choices, on the other hand, lead to a long road of frustration.
As anyone whoâs read Daniel Kahnemanâs Thinking, Fast and Slow or Michael Lewisâs latest, The Undoing Project, about Kahnemanâs relationship with his long-time collaborator, Amos Tversky, will tell you, often our ancient wiring â our lizard brain â circumvents our rational decision making. These heuristics, as they are called, are shortcuts that work much of the time but systematically fail at other times.
One of the common decision-making shortcuts in the business world is to default to the highest-paid personâs opinion (HIPPO). Now, the highest-paid person likely receives that compensation for a reason. Maybe theyâve made superior decisions in the past and have expertise in the field â which can make this shortcut even more tempting. But, as Kahneman and others have shown, experts are fallible. So if we want our organizations to make better decisions and avoid the HIPPO effect, we need to create a culture that encourages dissenting opinions.
Here are three steps to do that:
1. Hand out some thinking hats.
In Six Thinking Hats, Edward de Bono outlines a process that encourages groups to consider an issue from six different angles. He describes the different hats as follows:
- The White Hat (Facts) considers the information available and what additional data may be needed.
- The Red Hat (Feelings) examines how the decision makes the group feel. Whatâs the gut reaction?
- The Black Hat (Caution) plays the devilâs advocate. What could go wrong?
- The Yellow Hat (Benefits) dwells on the positive side. How could the decision go right?
- The Green Hat (Creativity) seeks ideas, the more imaginative the better.
- The Blue Hat (Manager) sets the goals and plans and directs the process.
When using this The Six Thinking Hats method, if one group member has always played devilâs advocate or proposed crazy, creative solutions, the team can no longer take it for granted. Whatâs more, the group should rotate the hats so one person isnât always in the same role.
The beauty of this structure is that the team is free to consider the various facets of almost every decision. And everyone has permission to do so.
2. Make debate a team sport.Â
Another way to build a culture that values diverse opinions is for the HIPPO to model it.
At the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, founders Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz routinely trash each otherâs ideas and encourage others to join in. As a guest on The Tim Ferriss Show, Andreessen explained their process:
âWhenever [Ben] brings in a deal, I just beat the sâ out of him. And I might think itâs the best idea Iâve ever heard, and Iâll just, like, trash the câ out of it. And Iâll get everybody else to pile on. . . . If at the end of that pile-on, the person is still pounding the table saying âNo, no, no, this is the thing,â weâll say âOkay, weâre all in, weâre all behind you.â . . . Itâs a disagree-and-commit kind of culture.â
Rarely is there unanimous consensus around a decision or investment idea, but by using this method we can build an environment that encourages stress testing ideas. At the end of the day, better decisions should result.
3. Donât add too much value.
If you are the HIPPO, be careful not to add too much value.
Patton famously said, âA good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan next week.â For our purposes, this means donât hold out for a perfect decision at the cost of diminished execution. What good is a 90% ideal decision improved to 95% with HIPPO input if the commitment to execution declines from 100% to 30%?
If people are excited about an idea and itâs directionally correct, let them run with it. Better to have complete buy-in on the execution than to erode morale in an attempt to marginally improve the decision. Again, to quote Patton, âNever tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.â
These methods are distilled from a Re:Think Decision-Making workshop I recently attended. Hosted by Shane Parrish and the Farnam Street crew, the workshop yielded more value than can be condensed in a single article, but one of the enduring takeaways was the enormous positive effect of making incrementally better decisions each day.
Just like investment returns compound over the long-term, good decisions do as well. Hopefully, these ideas will help you and your firm improve its decision making and avoid some of the shortcuts that can lead us off track.
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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the authorâs employer.
Image credit: ©Getty Images/LawrenceLong
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