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Fight as if you are right, listen as if you are wrong

Several studies have concluded that a sense of psychological safety is an important component of a successful team. It could be roughly described as the leader creating an environment in which team members can feel confident to speak up or get the job done without fear of being turned against if they are wrong or punished if they are wrong. A sense of psychological safety allows us to openly and frankly question beliefs, opinions or even the way we do things. If these issues are important to us, then it is worth learning to balance confidence and doubt. In my experience, a healthy amount of self-doubt can keep us from being arrogant assholes. Or as the ancient Japanese proverb goes: we are less annoying if we keep our mouths shut. :)
wise owl

Even though we like smart leaders, we find that they typically fail to create a psychologically safe environment around themselves. This is not necessarily a problem, it is just that they have to decide everything, and sooner or later it becomes a bottleneck. This is how a clever person becomes a barrier to progress.

A clever boss makes confident decisions based on what he knows. He has little doubt about his beliefs or his behaviour.

In contrast, the wise boss confidently decides based on what he knows and questions beliefs, assumptions and behaviour. Wise leaders know what they don’t know. They courageously build on the data and facts available at the time, while looking for signs of error. They think critically about their own opinions.

If you look closely, you can see the obvious differences between clever leaders and wise leaders:

  • The clever one speaks in extremes, stating the unquestionable truth, while the wise one makes statements with room for uncertainty.
  • The clever one answers questions (even those that have not yet been asked), the wise one asks questions.
  • The clever leader speaks well, while the wise listens well.
  • The clever leader helps but doesn’t ask and refuses help, whereas the wise one helps, asks for help and accepts it when it is offered.
  • The clever typically defends and sticks to his ideas, expressing strong opinions, the wise casts doubt and revises his own ideas, expressing strong opinions but not sticking to them.

The best way to get information is by asking questions, yet, funnily enough, it is the least used approach. If we play smart all the time, colleagues will be reluctant or unwilling to give their opinion. It’s like a child playing quietly in a room: more suspicious than reassuring.

Understandably, it is not easy to ‘act wise’, as this often results in having to support potentially annoying initiatives. For example, allowing colleagues to question basic assumptions or even to upset entrenched work habits.

Yet how can we behave more wisely, how can we create a safer environment for colleagues?

I have put together some tips for you to see if they help: 

  1. Don’t start fighting until everyone understands what the challenge is, what you are up against.
  2. Don’t argue while you are brainstorming ideas or solutions. Create a safe environment even for crazy ideas. You’ll throw out the bad ones once you’ve gathered a few.
  3. If colleagues are disagreeing with each other, stop for a moment and ask them to keep their voices down. Pay special attention to self-proclaimed standup comedians who insult others with their banter.
  4. Also listen to those who talk less and are therefore overshadowed. It’s not that they don’t give a sh…, they might just be more introverted. Politely mute those who talk a lot.
  5. Invite people to the meetings who will have to implement what you work out. Maybe they can tell you how it could be better for them. Or at least less bad.
  6. Ask more: What if…? Should we look at…? What data support…? Is there research that disproves or questions…?
  7. Don’t just listen to words, but also to non-verbal cues. Are they smiling? Are they really listening? Are they rolling their eyes? What are they not saying?
  8. Behind the scenes, calm down those who may have taken the discussion as a personal insult or whose ideas were voted down.
  9. Once the debate has been resolved, make sure the conflict and criticism has stopped. Leave no room for the victim role of “they shot down my idea”. 

Despite all these efforts, of course, there will be some people who are too sensitive for the argument or who are just unpleasant characters. It may be advisable to leave them out of the fray, as they may be the very reason why a constructive discussion cannot unfold.

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Harcolj úgy, mintha igazad lenne, hallgass úgy, mintha tévednél

Több kutatás jutott arra a következtetésre, hogy a pszichológiai biztonság érzete fontos összetevő egy ütőképes csapat életében. Kb. úgy lehetne leírni, hogy a vezető olyan környezetet teremt, melyben a csapattagok magabiztosan vállalhatják fel a véleményüket vagy végezhetik a munkát; anélkül, hogy tartaniuk kellene attól, hogy valaki ellenük fordítja, ha tévednek vagy büntetést kapnak, ha tévednek. A pszichológiai biztonság érzete lehetővé teszi, hogy bátran és nyíltan megkérdőjelezzük a hiedelmeket, véleményeket vagy épp azokat a módszereket, ahogyan a dolgokat csináljuk.
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Ha még a világ legjobbjai is feszt botladoznak, mi másra számítanánk mi?

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Researches and discussions report how diversity increases profit, productivity, or innovation. DEI (or more fashionably DEI&B) has clearly been on the HR agenda for many years now. We don’t need to do a deep analysis to experience how challenging it is to push the DEI idea through the managers. If we still feel it necessary to attend conferences, events or to go to workshops or training dinasours, it seems suspicious that it requires quite a lot of effort. But why is this, if the concept is so common sense? What is it that managers don’t understand? Honestly, they don’t understand what HR doesn’t do either.

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