PERSONAL SPECIAL How Keeping a Journal Can Increase Your Chances of
Making Right Decisions
Thedecisions we make can shape our lives in so many ways. But how
effectively do we make these decisions? When it comes to big decisions, either
personally or professionally, could there be a more effective and thorough way
to make a better choice?
What Are the Problems of Our Usual Way of Making Decisions?
Our decisions involve a process of the mind and can often be
influenced by our current circumstances, mood or impulse at the time. This
means we don’t always evaluate the pros and cons thoroughly, as a decision we make
today may not be the same decision we’d make a month from now.
It’s hard to keep track of how we came to these
decisions or examine how we could have made a better choice. Learning from our
decision-making processes can help streamline future decisions and understand
our thought patterns and subsequent outcomes.
You Can Learn How to Make Better Decisions by Keeping a Journal
This is where the idea of a decision journal comes
in which is when you create a physical account of the thought processes you
make during a decision. The advantage of writing down your thought processes
are three-fold: you can revisit and analyse the various factors you
used, it forces you to organise your thoughts and therefore think more
carefully about different outcomes, and prevents the habit of hindsight bias
because you have a written reference of how you came to a certain conclusion.
However, with a decision journal comes the need for structure.
It’s not a traditional journal where our random, and almost messy, thoughts are
therapeutically written. Instead it needs a more precise and strategic approach
in order to allow our future selves to look back and understand the process we
went through at the time.
If Your Decision Journal Can’t Be Well-Structured in This Way,
There Is No Point in Keeping One
When it comes to creating a decision journal, it’s important to
include the right kinds of questions in order to allow you to see the
decision-making process from all angles. This will help you with the best
possible feedback if you were to have to make the same or similar decision in
the future. Below is a basic structure you can follow with an example of what
you can write down.
·
Date and time of decision: day/month/year
·
The decision: Whether or not I should go for a
new job role at work.
·
How am I feeling?: Confident/focused/relaxed/exhausted/angry/anxious
– it’s important to know the emotional circumstances surrounding your decision
so be very honest.
·
What is the context of this decision?: I feel stuck in
my job role and it’s affecting my passion for the job.
·
What are the problems?: There’s no
longer any progression in my role and I’m no longer developing any new skills,
my current manager is unsupportive, and I would like to explore a different
side to the business/company which I feel I’m currently cut off from.
·
What are the complications?: Causing
negative reactions within my team and other co-workers, leaving at a time when
workload is high. Will I be happy staying at the same company or should I make
a clean break?
·
What are the alternative solutions? Look for a role
elsewhere completely or stay in my current position.
·
What are the possible outcomes? I will be much
happier in a different and developing role and gaining new skills but it could
also cause animosity in my old team making the new role difficult as I’d still
need to interact with them on some level. Could it be more beneficial to me to
find a job elsewhere to experience a new company?
·
What are my expectations of the outcome and the
probabilities? I’ll most likely be much happier in this new role and I’d feel
like I’m developing my career in a different direction, giving me more
contentment and fulfilment in my life. Perhaps my old team won’t be as upset as
I think they will be and if they are, I can handle it. The change and
experience is worth it. If I move to a completely new company, will it be a
positive experience and is it worth the hassle? It would mean a possible longer
commute somewhere or I may end up working with people I don’t get on with.
·
The outcome: Went for the internal job and was
hired for it.
·
6 month review (date) – what happened and what I
learned : Still in the job role. It’s been challenging and I’ve
experienced some animosity with my old team but I felt I handled it very well
and allowed me to develop my interpersonal skills. However, I feel I should
have been more courageous and looked elsewhere for another job as I think I’m
more unhappy with the company than I thought. I’ve learned that I need to
ignore the ‘safe’ route and not let my idea of a comfort zone stop me from
pursuing something different in the future.
The example above shows the raw thought process that was taken.
By writing it down, they were able to recognise that their decision was really
based around their emotions and blocked off the ability to make a more
courageous decision. Having this documented will help show how the decision
could have been made better.
This idea of a decision journal is to inject quality
control. It doesn’t matter what area of your life you are making the
decision – whether it’s ending a relationship, leaving a job or buying a car –
making a habit of keeping a decision journal will allow you to see your
decision-making patterns over time and help figure out how to improve them in
the future.
Jenny Marchal
http://www.lifehack.org/600154/how-keeping-a-journal-can-increase-your-chances-of-making-right-decisions
No comments:
Post a Comment