Are You Too Easily Blindsided?
Gerard Fritz/Flickr

Are You Too Easily Blindsided?

It’s difficult, but not impossible, to predict the future. In Superforecasting, Philip Tetlock profiles a small group of people who were able to successfully predict geopolitical events. More on this in a minute.

Tetlock puts wannabe visionaries into two categories:

Hedgehogs: folks who rely on one or two big ideas to understand the world and where it is going

Foxes: people who scoff at the idea of using one model to understand the world, and who instead seek out the best approach that fits

Who do you think does best?

I hope you said foxes because they consistently win.

And now for the backstory. The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) agency identifies and supports “high-risk, high-payoff” research. In 2010, they told Tetlock of their plans to sponsor a massive tournament to see who could create the best methods for creating intelligence forecasts such as:

  • Will the president of Tunisia flee to a cushy exile in the next month?
  • Will the euro fall below $1.20 in the next twelve months?

3,200 people passed through the initial stage of psychometric tests and started forecasting. To be clear, a somewhat random group of people from numerous walks of life set out to beat the forecasts of intelligence professionals. Many did.

Doug Lorch typifies the successful approach. He is actively open-minded (AOM). People like Doug actively seek out evidence and opinions that go against theirs. As Tetlock writes, “Beliefs are hypotheses to be tested, not treasures to be guarded.”

To take this idea a step further, Superforecasting makes the case that teams can also engage in AOM practices. But Tetlock argues that actively open-minded thinking is “an emergent property of the group itself, a property of the communication patterns among group members.”

I particularly like this passage from Tetlock’s book, which talks about the humility required to be a good forecaster:

The humility required for good judgment is not self-doubt – the sense that you are untalented, unintelligent, or unworthy. It is  intellectual humility. It is a recognition that reality is profoundly complex, that seeing things clearly is a constant struggle when it can be done at all, and that human judgment must, therefore, be riddled with mistakes.

Human judgment must be riddled with mistakes. Not just other people's judgment. Your judgment, and mine, too.

You may not care about your ability to predict geopolitical events, but I’d argue that many of Tetlock’s findings have applications to any professional’s career. If you rely too much on one or two mental models, you will make bad decisions.

We see this all the time with leaders of previously successful firms who can’t recognize how much their industry has changed and who keep trying to use the strategy that got them here, instead of a new strategy capable of advancing their company to the next level. Instead of success, they sink into stagnation.

By all means, test a strategy that has worked for you in the past, but be prepared to replace it with one that works better.

If our world keeps changing; so do you.

Bruce Kasanoff is a ghostwriter for entrepreneurs. He is the author of How to Self-Promote without Being a Jerk, a quick read about doing well by doing good.

An earlier version of this article appeared on Forbes. One version also appeared briefly on LinkedIn, but I didn't like the early reader reaction so I rewrote the article am reposting it now. (Yep, I tinker a lot.)

Nerida H.

Change Manager Agilist @ ART Consulting | APMG Organisational Change Management

9 年

I keep shooting myself in the foot, trying to add value to customers but in the end get perceived as the smaller fish and loose out in the long haul...

回复

I've noticed when people in charge regularly ignore or reject input from their staffs, those staffs tend to stop offering useful information or suggestions. That opens the person in charge (no longer a leader since the staff have stopped following) open to be blindsided.

回复
Istifanus Luka

Managing Director at Ebenezer Special Bread Bali

9 年

Yes,as it is said,"the best way of doing thing has not yet been discovered". Therefore we should keep on innovating ourself or else we stagnate.

回复
Marjan Savoji Shemshaki

Business Development Manager at Farachemie

9 年

Great Article !Human Thinking is not created with limited capacity and all great situations in the world happen by understanding the abilities of unlimited creative thinking .

回复
Ashvin Pudaruth

General Manager, Checkout.com Mauritius

9 年

Great article! This is probably why I have this natural dislike for attempts to model behavior, e.g. like "The 3 things that successful people do, etc". These are so limiting ... The same goes for these box-diagrams that were so popular 20 years ago, attempting to describe solutions to all problems ...

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Bruce Kasanoff的更多文章

  • Who Deserves a Coach?

    Who Deserves a Coach?

    I can divide most of the people I know into two groups: those who have never seriously considered hiring an executive…

    4 条评论
  • Bruce Kasanoff | Lead with Love

    Bruce Kasanoff | Lead with Love

    Business is about money. Making stuff that you can sell for more money than it cost you to produce.

    16 条评论
  • Don't Take Meditation Seriously

    Don't Take Meditation Seriously

    Today, I have a favor to ask. You are one of 87,664 people who have joined this community in which we each meditate for…

    21 条评论
  • Use Play to Unlock Your Full Potential

    Use Play to Unlock Your Full Potential

    For several years now, every time I get a profound download from the Universe, one word stands out: PLAY While…

    12 条评论
  • When You Step Back and Stop Thinking, You Come Up with Better Ideas

    When You Step Back and Stop Thinking, You Come Up with Better Ideas

    Sometimes the best way to make progress is to pause, take a step back, and stop thinking so hard. As someone who's…

    6 条评论
  • Stop Competing, Start Helping: How to Win Without Trying

    Stop Competing, Start Helping: How to Win Without Trying

    We’ve been taught that success is a race. A sprint to the top.

    28 条评论
  • If I Let Go of My Ego, Will I Lose My Confidence?

    If I Let Go of My Ego, Will I Lose My Confidence?

    APERTURE is my yearlong program designed to help you move towards love (i.e.

    25 条评论
  • Thriving in Crazy Times

    Thriving in Crazy Times

    Lately, I’ve been hearing from more people than ever who feel, well, frazzled. The world is changing rapidly.

    8 条评论
  • Lessons in Being Human

    Lessons in Being Human

    Get expert coaching for one-tenth the cost of hiring an executive coach. That's the big idea behind Aperture, a new…

    7 条评论
  • Stay Calm, No Matter What

    Stay Calm, No Matter What

    This weekend, I sat down and pulled together everything I know about staying calm when your body, mind, heart and/or…

    31 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了