In the last article, I wrote about thinking errors that are the biggest cause of leadership ineffectiveness. When leaders don’t pay attention to how they think and make decisions and the impact it has on the organization and its people, their actions—however well intended they may be—cease to produce the desired effect.
Making good decisions isn’t just about making the right choices; it’s also about being able to recognize and eliminate bad ones.
Here are the other four thinking traps that add to leadership ineffectiveness:
Goodhart’s law states, “When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.” In other words, when you start measuring people on specific end objectives, they will only optimize for that objective and try to achieve the outcome at all costs without considering the consequences.
When leaders design incentives focused on achieving set targets, it promotes unintended behavior—the primary focus on goal achievement leads to maximizing measures on which people are judged without paying attention to the process that generated those results. It also leads to neglecting other important areas.
Incentive structures work. So you have to be very careful of what you incent people to do, because various incentive structures create all sorts of consequences that you can’t anticipate — Steve Jobs
A leader can make it difficult for employees to game the system and incentivize the right behavior by using several different measures instead of relying only on one. This great strategy is by John Doerr from Measure What Matters, where he suggests pairing a quantity measure with a quality measure. For example, instead of considering only on-time deliveries as a measure of performance, including quality as a parameter too—how many bugs were reported, what did the code review process indicate, and did it scale to future needs?
By assessing multiple parameters—qualitative as well as quantitative—you encourage people to make choices that are better aligned with the future and their goals.
If an ad company is incentivized on CTR alone, it will optimize for clicks without paying attention to the target user. A high CTR in this case will achieve the goal even though the ad campaign will turn out to be ineffective.
To avoid the effect of Goodhart’s law, instead of measuring CTR alone, include traffic quality as a measure, too. This will ensure that the ad company optimizes the campaign to put the right ad in front of the right users.
When leaders think in terms of black and white—it’s right or wrong, good or bad, worthy or unworthy—they fail to consider all relevant facts and arguments before making a decision.
When the two words in their dictionary, “always” and “never,” rule their life, it is hard to separate fact from fiction. Preconceived notions combined with this rigidity in thinking are dangerous—they prevent them from learning, making corrections, and adapting to the needs of tomorrow.
Stuffing everything into boxes of good and bad leaves no room for balanced perspectives. It not only leads to poor choices, but it can also evoke feelings of imposterism—self-doubt, unworthiness, and inadequacy—in leaders.
Most people are binary and instant in their judgments; that is, they immediately categorize things as good or bad, true or false, black or white, friend or foe. A truly effective leader, however, needs to be able to see the shades of gray inherent in a situation in order to make wise decisions as to how to proceed — Steven Sample
To stop thinking black and white and get closer to the objective truth:
Olivia thinks that people are either talented or they’re not. When one of her new reports makes a mistake, she attributes the mistake to her incompetence. Black-and-white thinking makes her assume that her direct report is incapable of learning and no amount of effort can help her improve and do better.
These fixed mindset beliefs—certain people are born with special talents, and others who are less talented cannot get better with determination and effort—make her give less and less attention to her direct report. Without proper guidance, her direct report performs even worse, which further reinforces her beliefs.
Olivia can avoid the effect of black-and-white thinking by looking for alternative ways to explain the mistake. She must also practice strategies to develop a growth mindset, which will help her view intelligence as not fixed and something that can be increased with persistence, effort, and hard work.
Good intentions don’t always lead to good outcomes. A leader's well-intended solutions to fix a problem or drive an outcome may result in designing incentives with loopholes that reward people for making the issue worse or exploiting the system to their advantage.
When an attempted solution is not well thought out, it can lead to unintended consequences, which can be detrimental to business in the long run.
Economist Horst Siebert termed this phenomenon as the cobra effect based on a time when India was ruled by the British government. Here’s how the story goes:
The British government was concerned about the number of venomous cobras in Delhi. To reduce the number of cobras, they decided to offer a bounty for every dead cobra.
The strategy worked beautifully in the beginning, as a large number of cobras were killed for the reward. However, soon, considering it as a good source of income, people began breeding cobras. The program was finally scrapped when the government realized their incentives were gamed. Without incentives, cobra breeders set the snakes free, which further increased the cobra population in India.
To avoid the cobra effect:
Hacktoberfest is an October-long celebration to promote contributions to the free and open-source software communities. In 2020, participants were encouraged to submit four or more pull requests to any public free or open-source (FOS) repository, with a free "Hacktoberfest 2020" T-shirt for the first 75,000 participants to do so.
The free T-shirts caused thousands of frivolous pull requests on FOS projects. A large volume of pull requests made by users amounted to counterproductive changes to code, including changing project names from "My Project" to "My Awesome Project," changing bullet points to dashes, and, in some cases, even breaking working code.
A leader’s role involves encountering unknown situations, solving unseen problems, and making tough decisions. In such cases, intuition plays a crucial role in making better decisions. The intuition that comes with experience and expertise is definitely advantageous—it enables them to see information that others might miss.
Economics Nobel laureate and author of Thinking, Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman, defines intuition as “thinking that you know without knowing why you do.” He says that intuitive thinking has both advantages and disadvantages: it is faster than a rational approach but also more prone to error.
Relying on intuition alone can lead to deadly mistakes with devastating consequences. It can lead to significant errors in decision-making.
The decision maker of experience has at his disposal a checklist of things to watch out for before finally accepting a decision. A large part of the difference between the experienced decision maker and the novice in these situations is not any particular intangible like “judgment” or “intuition.” If one could open the lid, so to speak, and see what was in the head of the experienced decision-maker, one would find that he had at his disposal repertoires of possible actions; that he had checklists of things to think about before he acted; and that he had mechanisms in his mind to evoke these, and bring these to his conscious attention when the situations for decisions arose—Herbert Simon
To stop relying on intuition alone, leaders need to:
Jen is interviewing the marketing head for her new line of business today. The candidate's resume stands out, and so does the interview. She gave good answers, has the required experience and skills for the job, and also appeared friendly and at ease during the interview.
Yet, Jen can’t seem to put off the feeling that something is off. She isn’t able to point out what exactly about the candidate bothers her, which further adds to her discomfort and anxiety.
Relying on her intuition alone and refusing to roll out the job offer in this case could be a mistake. Just because her intuition is telling her that it may not be right does not make it so. Jen should consider inputs from the interview and rationally evaluate the candidates on their skills and expertise required for the job and not base the decision purely on their gut.
Ignorance is a blank sheet on which we may write; but error is a scribbled one from which we must first erase.
— Charles Caleb Colton
Previously published here.