Page 20 - BusinessWest March 31, 2021
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Flexible Thinking, Nimble Action
Companies Need to Hardwire These Traits into Their Organization
TBy Susan Robertson
o survive the pandemic, companies were
forced to adapt very quickly to radically
new circumstances. Even large organi- zations — where it’s typically difficult to shift directions quickly — managed to accomplish it. Leaders discovered that, when required, their organization could act much more quickly and nimbly than they normally do.
So, the obvious questions are: what was different? And how can you ‘hardwire’ this flexibility into your organization so it continues to be stronger in the future?
What Was Different?
All humans have a set of cognitive biases, which are mental shortcuts used for problem solving and decision making.
To be clear, cognitive biases are not individual or personal biases. They are a neuroscience phenom- enon that all humans share. It’s also important to understand that they operate subconsciously; they affect your thinking in ways that you don’t realize.
You have two different thinking systems, com- monly known as system 1 and system 2, sometimes referred to as thinking fast and thinking slow.
System 1 is the intuitive, quick, and easy think- ing that we do most of the time. In fact, it accounts for about 98% of our thinking. It doesn’t require a lot of mental effort; we do it easily, quickly, and without having to think about the fact that we’re thinking.
System 2 thinking is deeper thinking, the kind that’s required for complex problem solving and decision making. This deeper thinking requires more effort and energy; it literally uses more calories. Since it’s less energy-efficient, our brain automatical- ly and subconsciously defaults to the easier system-1 thinking whenever it can to save effort.
Cognitive biases result when our brain tries to stay in system-1 thinking, when perhaps it should be in system 2. The outcome is often sub-optimal solutions and/or poor decision making. But we don’t realize we have sub-optimized because all of this has happened subconsciously.
In typical circumstances, several of these cogni- tive biases conspire to make us perceive that con- tinuing as we are — with only slower, incremental changes — seems like the best decision. It feels familiar, it feels lower risk ... it just feels smarter.
Co-work
Continued from page 19
people will have more flexible working arrangements with their employees.”
Yun agreed, noting that many of Click’s members left because their
kids were learning at home — which
is sure to be a temporary situation; in fact, many schools have already invited students back to campus. She believes an increase in membership at Click is inevitable, though it may take some time.
“I think what’s going to happen
is, when kids go back to school in
the fall full-time, parents will be like, ‘maybe I can make it work at home,’ and continue to work at home, and in
Choosing to do nothing different is, very often, sim- ply the default. It frequently doesn’t even feel like we made a decision; instead, it feels like we were really smart for not making a potentially risky decision.
But during the pandemic, changing nothing, or changing very slowly, were simply not options. This particular situation was so unique that our brains didn’t have the choice to stay in short-cut system-1 thinking. System-2 thinking was required. Since we consciously realized we must change — quickly — our brains literally started working harder, in system 2, and the normal cognitive biases weren’t a factor.
How Can We Be More Nimble in the Future?
The key to maintaining flexible thinking and nimble behavior is to not allow our brains to fall into the trap of cognitive biases. Obviously, since these are intuitive and subconscious responses, this is not an easy task. But there are proven ways in which we can better manage our brains. Here are a few ways to start.
• Knock Out the Negativity Bias. This is the phe- nomenon in which negative experiences have a greater impact on your thoughts, feelings, and behaviors than positive experiences. So you are much more highly motivated to avoid the nega-
tive than you are to seek out positive. The way this manifests in your daily work is that you are much more prone to reject new ideas than to accept them, because rejecting ideas feels like you’re avoiding a potential negative.
Respond to “yes, but...” with “what if...?” This requires a dedicated and conscious mental effort, by everyone on the team, to monitor their own and the team’s response to new ideas. Every time “yes, but...” is uttered, the response needs to be, “what if we could solve for that?” This reframing of the prob- lem into a question will trigger our brains to look for solutions, instead of instantly rejecting the idea.
• Short-circuit the Status-quo Bias. The status- quo bias is a subconscious preference for the current state of affairs. We use ‘current’ as a mental reference point, and any change from that is perceived as a loss. As a result, we frequently overestimate the risk of a change, and dramatically underestimate the risk of business as usual.
When weighing a choice of possible actions, be
sure to overtly list “do nothing” as one of the choices, so you are forced to acknowledge it is a choice. Also include “risk” as one of the evaluation criteria, and force the team to list all the possible risks. Then comes the difficult part: remind the team that their subconscious brain is making them perceive the risks of doing nothing
to be lower than the reality, so they should multiply the possibility of each of those risks.
• Curtail the Curse
of Knowledge. In any subject where we have some expertise, we also have many subcon- scious assumptions about that subject. Under normal circum- stances, this ‘curse of knowledge’ (these latent assumptions) limits
our thinking and sup- presses our ability to come up with radically new ideas.
“Leaders
discovered that,
when required,
their organization
could act much
more quickly and
nimbly than they
”
       Rely on advisors who don’t have the same curse of knowledge. In other words, seek out advice from people outside of your industry. When evaluating ideas or actions, these outsiders won’t have the same blinders that you have, so they will likely have a more clear-eyed view of the benefits and risks.
The bad news is that cognitive biases are always going to be a factor in our problem solving and deci- sion making; they’re hardwired into us. The good news is that, with some dedicated and continuous mental effort, we can mitigate them and become nimbler in the face of change. u
Susan Robertson empowers individuals, teams, and organizations to more nimbly adapt to change, by transforming thinking from “why we can’t” to “how might we?” She is a creative thinking expert with more than 20 years of experience coaching Fortune 500 companies. As an instructor on applied creativity at Harvard, she brings a scientific foundation to enhancing human creativity; www.susanrobertson. com
normally do.
    Jeremy Goldsher (left) and Jeff Sauser say robust co-working spaces can
be economic drivers for communities.
a couple months, they’ll start to get lonely — professionally lonely — and start to come back, which is why they came here in the first place,” she told BusinessWest. “Really, I’m hopeful and optimistic.”
Stroke of Inspiration
Ned Barowsky was certainly opti- mistic when he launched a franchise of the national co-working company Venture X in Holyoke, right next to the Holyoke Mall.
He’s owned the retail and office
Co-work
Continued on page 21
   20 MARCH 31, 2021
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