Unconscious Paradigms Worth Examining: Your Winning Strategy
Dennis Adsit
Coach for Extraordinary First 100 Days Transitions, Building High-Performing Teams, Nudging Cultures
This is the second in a series of articles about the inner paradigms that shape how we...see, navigate, make sense of, and carve success...in the world.?
If "what got you here, won't get you there" is true, making fundamental changes to how you lead is going to require you to do more than rearrange the behavioral furniture. You need to hold he unconscious paradigms driving you up to the light.
The three paradigms worth examining are:
In Part 1 , I outlined different types of deep motivations that might be driving you out of bed. I suggested some inquiries to help you reflect on whether the deep motivation that got you here needs to change for the new situation you are in.
In this article, I will discuss Winning Strategies.? This article draws heavily on the brilliant work of Tracy Goss .?
But I hope you can also see why actions you are taking to secure the psychological outcomes you need might be attractive to an employer and get you promoted.?
What is a Winning Strategy?
It is a lifelong unconscious strategy for achieving psychological outcomes important to you.? It is also likely the core component of whatever success you have achieved.
Before delving deeper into what Winning Strategies are and where they came from here are some examples:
Some of these strategies might look like they are all about your psychology and personal outcomes…decrease chances of failing, make sure I can't be excluded, avoid uncomfortable feelings, etc.?
And it's true, they are. Winning Strategies have a lot to do with keeping your psychological ship seaworthy.
But I hope you can also see why actions you are taking to secure the psychological outcomes you need might be attractive to an employer and get you promoted.?"Organize everyone and everything," "increase my effort so I am viewed as the most valuable on the team," "listen for what is broken and volunteer to fix it," and "diffuse conflicts" are behaviors organizations seek and reward.?
A recent opinion piece in the NYTimes made painfully clear how true that is.
Ray Romano said "I don't know any comedians on stage who don't have issues with their Fathers.? Even me.? I am probably one or two hugs away from being an accountant."
How Did My Winning Strategy Develop?
Early in life, you start testing different approaches to getting your needs met and acquiring "power,"? however you define it. Based on what works and what doesn't, a Winning Strategy gets hammered out by how the environment around you responds.
Other forces also influence this Winning Strategy:
And in whatever sandbox you decided you could succeed in, a strategy starts to get traction and helps you accumulate rewards, power, position, contacts, status, and influence.? As it gets traction, it starts to shape what safety and threat look like and how you need to respond to bring the situation back to equilibrium.?
Your winning strategy starts affecting what you notice and what you don't.? It is the force behind the actions you choose.? It is exerting it's influence whether you are aware of how it is operating or not.
Your strategy starts gaining momentum.?You choose the chessboard you can win on and you start to get little hits of gratification. You achieve success, and gain status however you define it.?
Finally, the momentum becomes self-reinforcing. It leads you to start to listen and look for places and opportunities to put that winning strategy into action where you think you can win, while avoiding situations and challenges that look impossible to you.?
Hold that last thought because it's a critical piece to the puzzle of when and how your winning strategy will fail you.
Finally, the momentum becomes self-reinforcing. It leads you to start to listen and look for places and opportunities to put that winning strategy into action where you think you can win, while avoiding situations and challenges that look impossible to you.?
What Your Winning Strategy is Not
It is not your personality.? Not your "type" from whatever typing system is the current parlor-game-of-choice among seminar leaders.?
It is not your astronomical sign.? Not your leadership style.? There are not 4 of them or 9 or 16.? You can't get a list of winning strategies and pick yours out like a puppy from the pound.?
And it most assuredly is not something you are born with.? It can't be.? It’s empirically derived: had it not succeeded at whatever you pointed it at, it would not be a winning approach.
Unless you are onto the racket you're running, this strategy is unconscious.?
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Ways to Identify a Winning Strategy
Unless you are onto the racket you're running, this strategy is unconscious.?
You have to do the work and reflect deeply on what you do over and over again to get power and control and safety and achieve success in whatever realm you decided in Part 1 to play in.
You probably gathered from the previous examples, a winning strategy has three parts to it:?Attention, Actions, and Outcomes.
Here are some useful questions for each part:
Attention:? What do you listen for?? To what do you find your attention drawn?? What would you hear that would cause you to "move into action?"? What would be indications something was "wrong" or that you were needed or that you were losing control?
Actions: From what actions do you expect to get power, be rewarded, feel good about yourself?? When you notice yourself “mobilize into action,” what kinds of actions are you taking? What actions, when you are doing them, make you feel like you are "doing it right," and "living life correctly?"
In 360 reviews you've had done, what are the "positive" themes...the actions of yours that are so common they are seen and acknowledged by almost everyone?
Finally, when you find yourself judging someone else negatively, what are they doing and how are they living?? Are they not helping? Having too much fun?? Too long-winded?? Too combative?? Too attention-seeking? Since what they are doing is "wrong," the opposite of what they are doing might give you clues to the Action part of your winning strategy.
Outcomes: What does feeling fulfilled look like?? What is the nightmare scenario or discomfort you work hard to avoid?? If your life turns out as you want it, what happens? What makes you feel in control??
Another rich vein of clues can come from unwanted conditions that persist in your life.? The outcome you get from applying your winning strategy has an obvious payoff.? Getting this payoff from your winning strategy may be worth more to you than getting rid of the unwanted conditions.
Finally, Ms Goss ?offers a great hypothetical scenario to help you zero in on the Outcome part of your winning strategy.? Imagine you were chosen to fill in at a conference for an important speaker who became ill.? It is only a five minute speech, but you will represent your entire industry to a global audience, and it needs to be good.?
What is the first thing you do?? Call important people who will be in the audience to find out what they want to hear...to ensure you get approval? Go load up on data...to give you credibility? Get a haircut or a new outfit...to ensure you look "together?" Try to find funny stories or anecdotes...to make sure you are memorable? Find quotes from a range of experts...so you don't have to risk putting your views out there and being judged?
There is not a right answer to this hypothetical scenario.? Just clues that might point you towards the outcomes your winning strategy solves for.
If this is the case, your winning strategy will likely fail you. Why??Because what you listen for is limited.? What mobilizes you is limited. You're playing a limited game that you decided long ago you could win at.??
Wait. It's a Winning Strategy. What's the Problem?
The truth is there might not be a problem, because you're right, it has been a big part of the success you have achieved.
And, if you continue to pursue that which you consider possible…if you continue do the same type of job or take on the same basic challenges…then continuing to apply your winning strategy might absolutely be the right thing to do.
But remember, we are unpacking the trope "what got you here, won't get you there."?
The assumption is that the "there" is a big stretch.? It is something different than what you have done.? It might even be outside the realm of what you currently think is possible, but you are going for it anyway because the potential payoff is important to you or your family or maybe just because you have decided it’s a worthy pursuit.
If this is the case, your winning strategy will likely fail you.?
Why?? Because what you listen for is limited.? What mobilizes you is limited. You're playing a limited game that you decided long ago you could win at.
Moreover, you are solving for narrow, personal outcomes, rather than focusing on the impossible outcome that needs to happen in this new position. You're focusing on maintaining equilibrium and applying short-term salve to lifelong wounds, rather than on learning and adapting your actions solely in response to whether those actions are moving you closer to the reality you say you want to create.
What is the point is to track and uncover your winning strategy so you can own it, instead of it owning you.
How This Helps You Get 'There'
What is not the point here is to try to change horses by looking for a new winning strategy.? One is no better than another.?
Another coaching chestnut is that “your greatest strength is your greatest weakness.”? Thus, substituting one winning strategy for another will just bring a different set of limitations.
What is the point is to track and uncover your winning strategy so you can own it, instead of it owning you.? So you can recognize when it is operating.? So you can continue to use it when that is the approach that will drive the best outcomes for all stakeholders, not just for you and your personal psychology.?
And so you can put it down and step outside it when it is getting in the way, not moving you towards what you consider impossible, not bringing the future you have envisioned into the present.
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Part 3 will start to look at the final unconscious paradigm: how you think about what causes the outcomes in your life…the “good” ones and the “bad” ones…and in Part 4 I will look at the meaning you ascribe to those outcomes.
Dennis Adsit, Ph.D. is the President of Adsum Insights and designer of?The First 100 Days and Beyond , a consulting service for leaders in transition who need to get off to the best possible start in new jobs.
Chief Marketing Officer @ Ironclad | New Business Development, Marketing Communications
4 个月Great read Dennis Adsit and (as always) great points to consider how and what shapes our approach as leaders and what works and might not work in our learned winning strategy. Always helpful to pause and identify these biases towards action and towards inaction or avoidance. I’m definitely enjoying this series!