During the news, do you find yourself musing, "What were they
thinking?" Of course the standard reply is, "They weren't!" If
I'm the one guilty of a stupid decision, I grab the old defense, "It
seemed like a good idea at the time."
When we make a wrong decision, there can be serious consequences. Think about the aftermath of your own bad decisions. What was going on? What were you thinking? Were you thinking critically?
In another lifetime, as a software developer, we
were going to issue checks to 40,000 vendors for the first time with our new
system. I came in on Saturday to let it rip. I hit the button...the
system started whirring, the printers were loaded with blank checks, we were
going live...
Then the system crashed...the dreaded error code
S0C7 rolled across the screen..."Oh Charlie 7" is geek speak for a
non-numeric character sitting in a numeric field. Sure enough, I had let bad
data creep into the vendor payment field.
Yes, I had made a stupid beginner's error but the
real error was my own stinkin' thinkin.' I thought, "No one will put
anything but numbers in that field." I was trained as a scientist and
steeped in logical thinking. However, my logic failed me when I assumed
everyone touching the machine would think logically. Humans, as Mr. Spock might
tell us, are often highly illogical.
When we did the post mortem, I realized 3 things:
* My mission was off target
* My plan failed to consider important risks
* I ignored my most important software tool -- my brain.
* My plan failed to consider important risks
* I ignored my most important software tool -- my brain.
3 Critical Thinking Actions to Assure Success
We can draw critical thinking lessons from this
story to improve our daily decision making and problem solving.
1. Mission ain't wishin': The mission is not just pretty words on a
plaque. The mission is a daily guide to decision making and problem solving. I
mistakenly thought my mission was 'automate the vendor payments.' Had I thought
more critically up front, we might have had a mission like, 'Ensure timely,
correct vendor payments.'
Focus on correct payments would have spurred me to
think about how to ensure the system would produce that result. Timeliness
would have spurred me to test the system long before going live.
Critical thinking begins with a concrete mission we
can act upon. We must ask THE strategic question: Will this move me
closer to or further from the mission?
2. The Plan is the Boss: All our work must be guided by the plan.
Otherwise it's too easy to pull in different directions. It is very difficult
to make a great decision or solve a problem permanently in a vacuum. We must
understand the context and constraints for making the decision or solving the
problem. Where does this situation fall within the company plan?
My plan was incomplete because the mission was
incomplete. Through risk analysis of the likelihood and impact of common problems,
including non-numeric data in numeric-only fields, would have ensured our plan
contained actions to address these risks.
3. Best Tool = Brain: There are many "tools" we can use
to solve problems, make decisions, and enhance critical thinking. However,
there is an old saying: A fool with a tool is still a fool!
Even the most powerful tools cannot be used alone.
We must always do a reality check to enhance our decision process. I got
wrapped up in the cool new technology and didn't ask critical questions.
The most powerful tool we have is our brain. The
best tools facilitate tapping into our brains' many analytical capacities. Each
time we solve a problem or make a decision we store more information to help us
with the next problem or decision. When we do that post mortem we lock new
information into our neural pathways.
Thinking critically is our most vital asset as we
make decisions and solve problems every day:
* Create a strong mission
* Execute a robust plan to fulfill the mission, and
* Cultivate and flex full brain power.
* Execute a robust plan to fulfill the mission, and
* Cultivate and flex full brain power.
* *
* * *
Rebecca Staton-Reinstein, Ph.D., and president of Advantage Leadership, Inc., was a geneticist and medical researcher and learned to apply her critical-thinking skills as a manager and leader in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. She works with leaders and manages so they achieve their strategic goals applying critical thinking to pressing challenges.
Rebecca Staton-Reinstein, Ph.D., and president of Advantage Leadership, Inc., was a geneticist and medical researcher and learned to apply her critical-thinking skills as a manager and leader in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. She works with leaders and manages so they achieve their strategic goals applying critical thinking to pressing challenges.
* *
* * *
(Note: Mr. Spock drawing by Donnietu)
(Note: Mr. Spock drawing by Donnietu)
Want to know more about making better decisions and
solving problems successfully? Join us for Critical Thinking: The Secrets to
Successful Problem Solving & Decision Making.
* May 14, 2015 1-2:30 US
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