How the Wizard of Oz Can Help You Make Better Decisions
WE'RE OFF TO SEE THE WIZARD...
Every day as entrepreneurs we are called upon to make decisions. Many times we face pretty straightforward line-items that do not call for a tremendous amount of deep thought or self-reflection. For instance, should I offer unlimited caffeinated beverages to my programmers? HELL YEAH! Bam, you're done and can move on to the next thing.
But most of the important decisions facing entrepreneurs require a rare combination of logic, intuition, and emotion. For example, any startup founder choosing a co-founder on the basis of a resume and a couple of coffee dates is asking for the disaster that will surely befall them. And yet, such critical decisions must be made relatively quickly in business, and cannot be passed upstairs or put off indefinitely. A framework for thinking through these important multifaceted choices must be efficient, offer a course of action, and instill more confidence than simply flipping a coin or just choosing anything.
The framework I have employed for years I call the Wizard of Oz Decision Strategy.
Ask IN THIS ORDER the following questions (with apologies to fans of the movie musical, I mix up the order of the "If I Only Had a Brain/Heart/Nerve" song):
- What do the facts say?
- Do I have the courage for this?
- What are my emotions telling me?
1. BRAIN: Do you have the necessary data to make an informed decision? If not, why not and how can you gather data quickly? Specifically, is this the best trade-off between quantifiable factors -- including opportunity costs -- that you can make at this time?
However, it can be surprisingly tricky when you ask the questions precisely. An illustrative example is financing a startup. Every entrepreneur's dream scenario is to get a lot of excellent term sheets, and then just pick the best one. However, that ignores the fact that you could always choose to keep looking for a better deal -- which of course runs the risk of losing all the good deals on the table -- or that terms are never exactly apples-to-apples scenarios, or that term sheets are nonbinding, or that analysis paralysis is often worse than not having enough options.
2. NERVE: What are you most afraid of in this decision? Why? Specifically, is it even the right thing to be afraid of?
I've often read that courage is not the absence of fear; it's the ability to listen to that fear and do the right thing in the circumstances anyway. As an entrepreneur, if you don't have any fear you're probably not listening to the right channels and processing them in the right way -- because entrepreneurship is inherently sort of terrifying!
3. HEART: Does this decision make you feel alive and most yourself, or anxious and burdened? What do you really want?
For example, it's not uncommon to hear about startups that sold when they seemed to be doing fine. In many such cases, a deeper examination of the situation would reveal something I call "founder fatigue": the founder realizes that he or she just doesn't really want to run this particular startup any more. Maybe the exciting part of creating the product is over and now it is just the stresses that come with success. Maybe being the final arbiter of all things is lonely and isolating. Whatever the reason, if the founder is done and the opportunity is there, it is often a good idea to sell the company.
The key is to give yourself permission to acknowledge your feelings and to act upon them. If you have a funny feeling about hiring that seemingly great executive, you get excited about a skunkworks project even though you should be working on something else, or you realize you can barely make yourself care about your company any more -- those are all important data points that you need to include in your decision making process.
LEARN MORE ABOUT MAKING BETTER DECISIONS:
- Fearlessness: 3 Things You Can Learn from Special Ops and Navy SEALS
- 3 Quick Easy Ways To Boost Self-Confidence
- How To Reduce the Number of Bad Decisions You Make
- Advice on How to Make Better Decisions, Tailored Just for You
- Secrets to Making Better Decisions
- Checklist: What 9 Things Can Help You Make Better Decisions?
- 5 Counterintuitive Things That Can Help You Make Better Choices
Happiness Is When You Live On Purpose
8 年I really enjoyed this,founder fatigue is very real and almost feels like an act of treason we must let go of. As in Oz, we must also be prepared for what a great wild storm can bring.
?? Composing dark, edgy, compulsive, intense music that's sometimes playful, often serious, occasionally unsettling, scary, unremitting and even doom-laden ??
8 年Great 3 point aide-memoire, Adam. Thanks.
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9 年Adam, The Wizard of Oz has been sitting on my recorded-movie list. My daughter keeps telling me “you’ll never watch it. Can I erase it?” Thanks for giving me a good excuse. Dan
Owner, MDCC
10 年Like your Analogy... and insight... Use Heart, Nerve ( Courage & fortitude ) and Brain ( Knowledge & Also try to learn every Day !! ) in my Consulting Business, working with and sometimes dealing with a tough Client or Problem.. Oh ...how the Movie.. brings us back to REALITY ! ! Thank You everyone, great comments and Blog MJD Owner MDCC
Corporate Aviation and Smart Hangars/Smart Airports at Qualcomm
11 年Great read. Much to process.