The Key to Cultivating Agility in Decision Making
Decision-making
excellence requires self-awareness and the ability to choose how to think in
different situations.
Let’s say a store has
been selling large snow shovels for $15. The morning after a major snowstorm,
the store raises its price to $20. Is this acceptable?
A large majority of
business people in my seminars answer that yes, it is acceptable to raise the
price of shovels after a storm. They invoke the law of supply and demand; they
quote the example of street selling of umbrellas when it rains; they explain
that the competitive context would not let them survive otherwise; they blame
the customers for not having anticipated the storm, and many other reasons that
resemble excuses.
In reality, they
don’t really think about whether it is acceptable or not for the store to raise
its prices. They react, and then they think about how they can justify their
“choice”.
Their reaction mostly
comes from an implicit and unconscious identification with the business owner.
From this perspective, they expect that raising the price of the shovels will
help them make more profit. This is the way they think.
But a seminal study found that 82 percent
of people (not business people but a representative sample) do not
think it is acceptable to raise the price of the snow shovels after a
storm. If the local customers are similarly minded, they are likely to be angry
and lose trust in the shop if it does so. They will certainly refrain from
buying anything else they do not absolutely need, and will consider that the
shop is out to exploit them as much as it can.
Over the long term,
then, it could be bad for business to raise the price of snow shovels after a
storm.
It is thus crucial to
realise how business leaders tend to be conditioned to think a certain way,
e.g. the idea that they should exploit all available opportunities for profit
maximisation. When this way of thinking directly clashes with the ethics of
their customers, respect for nature or the will of their government, it can
lead them to take wrong decisions and eventually destroy opportunities and lose
profits.
Thinking about how we
think
The
way we think is a part of our experience of life, but also helps shape
it. It is what makes us smart, or not so smart after all.
Each one of you has a
very unique way of thinking. I do too. No two people’s minds operate in
precisely the same way. Furthermore, each of us is capable of many different
kinds of thinking, not only depending on what we think about,
but also depending on what we want to do, say, understand, or even who we want
to be.
Being aware of our
way of thinking, of its uniqueness and at the same time of its commonality with
others’ ways of thinking, helps us exercise one of our most critical abilities
as decision makers: namely, choosing the way we think.
At the global level,
our historical moment demands that we make this choice carefully, because new
technologies and political events are critically altering our world, including
how we do business. Such sweeping transitions are dangerous and we often prefer
not to think about them. Still, they can also be an opportunity
to make things better. Above all, we need to adjust our ways of thinking to
meet the fast-changing world around us. As Einstein put it, “A new type of
thinking is essential if mankind is to survive and move toward higher levels.”
Of course, we know
that we are free to think what we want. But choosing how we can think about
something is difficult. Often, we believe that there is only one way to think
about something, as in our example of business owners esteeming five additional
dollars per shovel above their most valuable asset: customer relationships.
However, there are always many ways to think about something.
Consciously choosing
the way we think is the expression of a unique freedom that human beings
possess and can nurture. It is a way to be free, at the most evolved and
beautiful level.
In my teaching, I
invite participants to learn different ways of thinking in order for them to
nurture their freedom and their power. With freedom and power comes
responsibility. I am inviting them to be responsible for what they do with this
thinking agility. They can use it to think more, or less, to think in a more
altruistic manner, or in a more self-interested direction. They can use it to
better understand the world of business and be more agile in their way of
thinking.
Decision making for
leaders
This is a crucial
skill for today’s leaders. Being able to understand different perspectives
helps to anticipate the reaction of customers and to evaluate ethical risks in
decision making. It is also critical to genuinely assess how various options
align with the values of the organisation and of its people. Business people
need to be trained not to make decisions blindly, especially decisions where
core values are implicated. They need to learn to avoid the trap of
justifications, to analyse and to think about all dimensions of a decision
before acting, and especially before communicating.
For example, if you owned the store
that sold shovels, the better business decision might be to lower prices after
a snowstorm. How many more customers may come as a result? What would be the
effect of securing their trust? How would this newly generated goodwill impact
sales more broadly, beyond the snowstorm emergency? There is no definite answer
to whether one should raise the price or not after a storm, but we should not
simply react because there are compelling reasons to think seriously about both
alternatives.
Marc Le Menestrel, INSEAD Visiting Professor of Corporate Governance and Sustainability
Read more at
https://knowledge.insead.edu/blog/insead-blog/the-key-to-cultivating-agility-in-decision-making-9521?utm_source=INSEAD+Knowledge&utm_campaign=5bb7733ee7-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_06_28_04_21&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e079141ebb-5bb7733ee7-249840429#wyDslVTFwvtVuGjq.99
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