The McKinsey Quarterly

  • Recommend (155)
  • Text Size
  • Print
  • Download PDF
  • Link to This

Strategic decisions: When can you trust your gut?

Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman and psychologist Gary Klein debate the power and perils of intuition for senior executives.

For two scholars representing opposing schools of thought, Daniel Kahneman and Gary Klein find a surprising amount of common ground. Kahneman, a psychologist, won the Nobel Prize in economics in 2002 for prospect theory, which helps explain the sometimes counterintuitive choices people make under uncertainty. Klein, a senior scientist at MacroCognition, has focused on the power of intuition to support good decision making in high-pressure environments, such as firefighting and intensive-care units.

In a September 2009 American Psychology article titled “Conditions for intuitive expertise: A failure to disagree,” Kahneman and Klein debated the circumstances in which intuition would yield good decision making. In this interview with Olivier Sibony, a director in McKinsey’s Brussels office, and Dan Lovallo, a professor at the University of Sydney and an adviser to McKinsey, Kahneman and Klein explore the power and perils of intuition for senior executives.

The Quarterly: In your recent American Psychology article, you asked a question that should be interesting to just about all executives: “Under what conditions are the intuitions of professionals worthy of trust?” What’s your answer? When can executives trust their guts?

Gary Klein: It depends on what you mean by “trust.” If you mean, “My gut feeling is telling me this; therefore I can act on it and I don’t have to worry,” we say you should never trust your gut. You need to take your gut feeling as an important data point, but then you have to consciously and deliberately evaluate it, to see if it makes sense in this context. You need strategies that help rule things out. That’s the opposite of saying, “This is what my gut is telling me; let me gather information to confirm it.”

Daniel Kahneman: There are some conditions where you have to trust your intuition. When you are under time pressure for a decision, you need to follow intuition. My general view, though, would be that you should not take your intuitions at face value. Overconfidence is a powerful source of illusions, primarily determined by the quality and coherence of the story that you can construct, not by its validity. If people can construct a simple and coherent story, they will feel confident regardless of how well grounded it is in reality.

The Quarterly: Is intuition more reliable under certain conditions?

Gary Klein: We identified two. First, there needs to be a certain structure to a situation, a certain predictability that allows you to have a basis for the intuition. If a situation is very, very turbulent, we say it has low validity, and there’s no basis for intuition. For example, you shouldn’t trust the judgments of stock brokers picking individual stocks. The second factor is whether decision makers have a chance to get feedback on their judgments, so that they can strengthen them and gain expertise. If those criteria aren’t met, then intuitions aren’t going to be trustworthy.

Most corporate decisions aren’t going to meet the test of high validity. But they’re going to be way above the low-validity situations that we worry about. Many business intuitions and expertise are going to be valuable; they are telling you something useful, and you want to take advantage of them.

Daniel Kahneman: This is an area of difference between Gary and me. I would be wary of experts’ intuition, except when they deal with something that they have dealt with a lot in the past. Surgeons, for example, do many operations of a given kind, and they learn what problems they’re going to encounter. But when problems are unique, or fairly unique, then I would be less trusting of intuition than Gary is. One of the problems with expertise is that people have it in some domains and not in others. So experts don’t know exactly where the boundaries of their expertise are.

The Quarterly: Many executives would argue that major strategic decisions, such as market entry, M&A, or R&D investments, take place in environments where their experience counts—what you might call high-validity environments. Are they right?

Gary Klein: None of those really involve high-validity environments, but there’s enough structure for executives to listen to their intuitions. I’d like to see a mental simulation that involves looking at ways each of the options could play out or imagining ways that they could go sour, as well as discovering why people are excited about them.

Daniel Kahneman: In strategic decisions, I’d be really concerned about overconfidence. There are often entire aspects of the problem that you can’t see—for example, am I ignoring what competitors might do? An executive might have a very strong intuition that a given product has promise, without considering the probability that a rival is already ahead in developing the same product. I’d add that the amount of success it takes for leaders to become overconfident isn’t terribly large. Some achieve a reputation for great successes when in fact all they have done is take chances that reasonable people wouldn’t take.

 

Gary Klein: Danny and I are in agreement that by the time executives get to high levels, they are good at making others feel confident in their judgment, even if there’s no strong basis for the judgment (see sidebar, “Overconfidence in action?”).

The Quarterly: So you would argue that selection processes for leaders tend to favor lucky risk takers rather than the wise?

Daniel Kahneman: No question—if there’s a bias, it’s in that direction. Beyond that, lucky risk takers use hindsight to reinforce their feeling that their gut is very wise. Hindsight also reinforces others’ trust in that individual’s gut. That’s one of the real dangers of leader selection in many organizations: leaders are selected for overconfidence. We associate leadership with decisiveness. That perception of leadership pushes people to make decisions fairly quickly, lest they be seen as dithering and indecisive.

Gary Klein: I agree. Society’s epitome of credibility is John Wayne, who sizes up a situation and says, “Here’s what I’m going to do”—and you follow him. We both worry about leaders in complex situations who don’t have enough experience, who are just going with their intuition and not monitoring it, not thinking about it.

Daniel Kahneman: There’s a cost to not being John Wayne, since there really is a strong expectation that leaders will be decisive and act quickly. We deeply want to be led by people who know what they’re doing and who don’t have to think about it too much.

The Quarterly: Who would be your poster child for the “non–John Wayne” type of leader?

Gary Klein: I met a lieutenant general in Iraq who told me a marvelous story about his first year there. He kept learning things he didn’t know. He did that by continuously challenging his assumptions when he realized he was wrong. At the end of the year, he had a completely different view of how to do things, and he didn’t lose credibility. Another example I would offer is Lou Gerstner when he went to IBM. He entered an industry that he didn’t understand. He didn’t pretend to understand the nuances, but he was seen as intelligent and open minded, and he gained trust very quickly.

The Quarterly: A moment ago, Gary, you talked about imagining ways a decision could go sour. That sounds reminiscent of your “premortem” technique. Could you please say a little more about that?

Gary Klein: The premortem technique is a sneaky way to get people to do contrarian, devil’s advocate thinking without encountering resistance. If a project goes poorly, there will be a lessons-learned session that looks at what went wrong and why the project failed—like a medical postmortem. Why don’t we do that up front? Before a project starts, we should say, “We’re looking in a crystal ball, and this project has failed; it’s a fiasco. Now, everybody, take two minutes and write down all the reasons why you think the project failed.”

The logic is that instead of showing people that you are smart because you can come up with a good plan, you show you’re smart by thinking of insightful reasons why this project might go south. If you make it part of your corporate culture, then you create an interesting competition: “I want to come up with some possible problem that other people haven’t even thought of.” The whole dynamic changes from trying to avoid anything that might disrupt harmony to trying to surface potential problems.

Daniel Kahneman: The premortem is a great idea. I mentioned it at Davos—giving full credit to Gary—and the chairman of a large corporation said it was worth coming to Davos for. The beauty of the premortem is that it is very easy to do. My guess is that, in general, doing a premortem on a plan that is about to be adopted won’t cause it to be abandoned. But it will probably be tweaked in ways that everybody will recognize as beneficial. So the premortem is a low-cost, high-payoff kind of thing.

The Quarterly: It sounds like you agree on the benefits of the premortem and in your thinking about leadership. Where don’t you see eye to eye?

Daniel Kahneman: I like checklists as a solution; Gary doesn’t.

Gary Klein: I’m not an opponent of checklists for high-validity environments with repetitive tasks. I don’t want my pilot forgetting to fill out the pretakeoff checklist! But I’m less enthusiastic about checklists when you move into environments that are more complex and ambiguous, because that’s where you need expertise. Checklists are about if/then statements. The checklist tells you the “then” but you need expertise to determine the “if”—has the condition been satisfied? In a dynamic, ambiguous environment, this requires judgment, and it’s hard to put that into checklists.

Daniel Kahneman: I disagree. In situations where you don’t have high validity, that’s where you need checklists the most. The checklist doesn’t guarantee that you won’t make errors when the situation is uncertain. But it may prevent you from being overconfident. I view that as a good thing.

The problem is that people don’t really like checklists; there’s resistance to them. So you have to turn them into a standard operating procedure—for example, at the stage of due diligence, when board members go through a checklist before they approve a decision. A checklist like that would be about process, not content. I don’t think you can have checklists and quality control all over the place, but in a few strategic environments, I think they are worth trying.

The Quarterly: What should be on a checklist when an executive is making an important strategic decision?

Daniel Kahneman: I would ask about the quality and independence of information. Is it coming from multiple sources or just one source that’s being regurgitated in different ways? Is there a possibility of group-think? Does the leader have an opinion that seems to be influencing others? I would ask where every number comes from and would try to postpone the achievement of group consensus. Fragmenting problems and keeping judgments independent helps decorrelate errors of judgment.

The Quarterly: Could you explain what you mean by “correlated errors”?

Daniel Kahneman: Sure. There’s a classic experiment where you ask people to estimate how many coins there are in a transparent jar. When people do that independently, the accuracy of the judgment rises with the number of estimates, when they are averaged. But if people hear each other make estimates, the first one influences the second, which influences the third, and so on. That’s what I call a correlated error.

Frankly, I’m surprised that when you have a reasonably well-informed group—say, they have read all the background materials—that it isn’t more common to begin by having everyone write their conclusions on a slip of paper. If you don’t do that, the discussion will create an enormous amount of conformity that reduces the quality of the judgment.

The Quarterly: Beyond checklists, do you disagree in other important ways?

Gary Klein: Danny and I aren’t lined up on whether there’s more to be gained by listening to intuitions or by stifling them until you have a chance to get all the information. Performance depends on having important insights as well as avoiding errors. But sometimes, I believe, the techniques you use to reduce the chance of error can get in the way of gaining insights.

Daniel Kahneman: My advice would be to try to postpone intuition as much as possible. Take the example of an acquisition. Ultimately, you are going to end up with a number—what the target company will cost you. If you get to specific numbers too early, you will anchor on those numbers, and they’ll get much more weight than they actually deserve. You do as much homework as possible beforehand so that the intuition is as informed as it can be.

The Quarterly: What is the best point in the decision process for an intervention that aims to eliminate bias?

Daniel Kahneman: It’s when you decide what information needs to be collected. That’s an absolutely critical step. If you’re starting with a hypothesis and planning to collect information, make sure that the process is systematic and the information high quality. This should take place fairly early.

Gary Klein: I don’t think executives are saying, “I have my hypothesis and I’m looking only for data that will support it.” I think the process is rather that people make quick judgments about what’s happening, which allows them to determine what information is relevant. Otherwise, they get into an information overload mode. Rather than seeking confirmation, they’re using the frames that come from their experience to guide their search. Of course, it’s easy for people to lose track of how much they’ve explained away. So one possibility is to try to surface this for them—to show them the list of things that they’ve explained away.

Daniel Kahneman: I’d add that hypothesis testing can be completely contaminated if the organization knows the answer that the leader wants to get. You want to create the possibility that people can discover that an idea is a lousy one early in the game, before the whole machinery is committed to it.

The Quarterly: How optimistic are you that individuals can debias themselves?

Daniel Kahneman: I’m really not optimistic. Most decision makers will trust their own intuitions because they think they see the situation clearly. It’s a special exercise to question your own intuitions. I think that almost the only way to learn how to debias yourself is to learn to critique other people. I call that “educating gossip.” If we could elevate the gossip about decision making by introducing terms such as “anchoring,” from the study of errors, into the language of organizations, people could talk about other people’s mistakes in a more refined way.

The Quarterly: Do you think corporate leaders want to generate that type of gossip? How do they typically react to your ideas?

Daniel Kahneman: The reaction is always the same—they are very interested, but unless they invited you specifically because they wanted to do something, they don’t want to apply anything. Except for the premortem. People just love the premortem.

The Quarterly: Why do you think leaders are hesitant to act on your ideas?

Daniel Kahneman: That’s easy. Leaders know that any procedure they put in place is going to cause their judgment to be questioned. And whether they’re fully aware of it or not, they’re really not in the market to have their decisions and choices questioned.

The Quarterly: Yet senior executives want to make good decisions. Do you have any final words of wisdom for them in that quest?

Daniel Kahneman: My single piece of advice would be to improve the quality of meetings—that seems pretty strategic to improving the quality of decision making. People spend a lot of time in meetings. You want meetings to be short. People should have a lot of information, and you want to decorrelate errors.

Gary Klein: What concerns me is the tendency to marginalize people who disagree with you at meetings. There’s too much intolerance for challenge. As a leader, you can say the right things—for instance, everybody should share their opinions. But people are too smart to do that, because it’s risky. So when people raise an idea that doesn’t make sense to you as a leader, rather than ask what’s wrong with them, you should be curious about why they’re taking the position. Curiosity is a counterforce for contempt when people are making unpopular statements.

About the Authors

Daniel Kahneman is a Nobel laureate and a professor emeritus of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School. He is also a fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a Gallup senior scientist. Gary Klein is a cognitive psychologist and senior scientist at MacroCognition. He is the author of Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions, The Power of Intuition, and Streetlights and Shadows: Searching for the Keys to Adaptive Decision Making.

Recommend (155)
  • 24 FEBRUARY 2011
    Gulshan Saraswat
    Sr. Manager
    HT media
    Delhi, India

    ...For the people who are doing the premortem, I feel they will never succeed as they are already starting to think negative about the project.

    .
    Gulshan Saraswat
    Sr. Manager
    HT media
    Delhi, India

    The authors say that people should plan ahead (premortem) on why a project will fail. For the people who are doing the premortem, I feel they will never succeed as they are already starting to think negative about the project.

    .
  • 19 AUGUST 2010
    Elnur Gasanov
    Assistant Manager
    PricewaterhouseCoopers
    Azerbaijan

    ...it’s also a matter of mentality and corporate culture. The more democratic is the corporate culture, the less bias can be expected....

    .
    Elnur Gasanov
    Assistant Manager
    PricewaterhouseCoopers
    Azerbaijan

    Pro-chief bias is definitely a factor. In supporting the leader’s position, subordinates usually have plenty of motivation, it’s also a matter of mentality and corporate culture. The more democratic is the corporate culture, the less bias can be expected. However, the level of bias is, to a large extent, dependent on the personal qualities of the leader, for example, level of charisma, persuasiveness, and assertiveness.

    .
  • 16 JULY 2010
    Bala Ramanan
    Group Consultant
    Microland Ltd
    India

    ...Without knowing anything about horse racing and horses, if I place a bet on Horse number 2, just because I have a gut feeling, and if I win, was that intuition?...

    .
    Bala Ramanan
    Group Consultant
    Microland Ltd
    India

    In my opinion, Intuition is the output of a constant thinking process. Intuition can happen to anyone, but the domain matters. For example, I have never been to a horse race, but if I do tomorrow, on which horse will I place my bet? Without knowing anything about horse racing and horses, if I place a bet on Horse number 2, just because I have a gut feeling, and if I win, was that intuition? What do you call a CEO who is in the line of business for the last 3 decades and takes an important decision based on his intuition (thoughts arising out of his 30+ years experience - well he may or may not have a checklist or a premortem)?

    I am not getting into probability theory now. Maybe I was just lucky at the horse race. I can’t do that to my business.

    What I could not get from the above discussion is the process of taking right decisions and factors that can influence one’s intution on the same.

    Would appreciate if I get a reply on this.

    .
  • 11 JUNE 2010
    Rashed Iqbal
    Project Manager
    Optical Research
    Pasadena, CA USA

    About three decades ago, two researchers (Charles H. Kepner and Benjamin B. Tregoe) originally from RAND developed techniques called Rational Management to aid business managers in problem solving...

    .
    Rashed Iqbal
    Project Manager
    Optical Research
    Pasadena, CA USA

    About three decades ago, two researchers (Charles H. Kepner and Benjamin B. Tregoe) originally from RAND developed techniques called Rational Management to aid business managers in problem solving, decision making, and in future analysis. These techniques are great aid to instinct or gut-value evaluation. The book they wrote is called The New Rational Manager: An Updated Edition for a New World. It’s rather strange that GK and DK did not mention (or are not aware of that work).

    .
  • 25 MAY 2010
    Srinivasan N
    COO
    ProPart Solutions India P Ltd.
    Hyderabad, ndhra Pradesh, India

    ...my colleague and I frequently represent the two ends of the decision making style spectrum: he decides quickly on gut feel and I need to analyze information before coming to a decision. It is amazing that we often arrive at...

    .
    Srinivasan N
    COO
    ProPart Solutions India P Ltd.
    Hyderabad, ndhra Pradesh, India

    I guess you trust gut under two different scenarios:
    a)When you do not have reasonably adequate information
    b)When you have it but want to go against what it suggests.

    In the first scenario, you have little choice but to go by it. However this is becoming a lesser possibility given what IT has provided us with - ERPs and Internet.

    The second case is, perhaps a matter of style. I am not a psychologist so it is just my wild guess that gut or intuition extrapolates a result after processing information that we are not consciously aware of that we indeed possess and hence is not accessible for deliberate controlled processing.

    In our own company, my colleague and I frequently represent the two ends of the decision making style spectrum: he decides quickly on gut feel and I need to analyze information before coming to a decision. It is amazing that we often arrive at similar decisions even without communicating with one another our thoughts and activities. Yet there are occasions when we swap roles.

    I wonder if there is any researched conclusions about what has worked better, intuitive decisions or informed decisions.

    .
  • 25 MAY 2010
    Laurent Blain
    EMEA (Sr.) Project manager
    Canon Europe
    Netherlands

    I agree with the importance of quality in meetings. For me, this is extremely key to getting a well-prepared meeting with an open-minded audience, yet ensuring fact-based decisions....

    .
    Laurent Blain
    EMEA (Sr.) Project manager
    Canon Europe
    Netherlands

    I agree with the importance of quality in meetings. For me, this is extremely key to getting a well-prepared meeting with an open-minded audience, yet ensuring fact-based decisions. Sometimes hidden agenda’s or lack to recognize issues or errors, will bias the decision outcome. Given the pressure nowadays, managers sometimes tend to shortcut decisions and dismiss the learning curve.

    .
  • 24 MAY 2010
    Andrew Wilson
    PI
    DfE
    England

    The inability of individuals to conceive of insights and solutions that do not fit within their paradigm is a significant issue for all too many...

    .
    Andrew Wilson
    PI
    DfE
    England

    Great discussion/article—it’s hard to imagine the issues ever being totally resolved, but hopefully leaders in sufficient numbers will reflect on these insights and use them as a basis to learn and grow.

    The inability of individuals to conceive of insights and solutions that do not fit within their paradigm is a significant issue for all too many, and when combined with the craving for process certainty (tick boxing) it opens the door to a path that will almost certainly lead to the land of unintended consequences and (relative) failure.

    .
  • 24 MAY 2010
    Jeff Slotnick
    Program Leader
    GE Global Research
    Niskayuna, NY USA

    ...I like the way Gary suggests framing it as “what went wrong” instead of “what could go wrong.” It could be more immersive for the risk-assessment participants; like role-playing. I’ll try it.

    .
    Jeff Slotnick
    Program Leader
    GE Global Research
    Niskayuna, NY USA

    Premortem - great idea. Risk assessments are part of our culture and in the context I’ve experienced, have not caused projects to be cancelled. They do, however, flush out latent concerns and issues that can be addressed early. I like the way Gary suggests framing it as “what went wrong” instead of “what could go wrong.” It could be more immersive for the risk-assessment participants; like role-playing.

    I’ll try it.

    .
  • 24 MAY 2010
    Graham Johnson
    Transformation Director
    EIG
    Gloucester UK

    Having worked with a variety of leaders, I found that entrepreneurs would use intuition more than CEO’s of large companies....

    .
    Graham Johnson
    Transformation Director
    EIG
    Gloucester UK

    Having worked with a variety of leaders, I found that entrepreneurs would use intuition more than CEO’s of large companies. The entrepreneurs would use gut feel and assume that when/if things turned out differently they would find a way to manage it; whereas some CEO’s would almost want “proof” that a decision was correct and didnt like the uncertaininty that goes with it sometimes. To manage this, financial-risk-based analysis is employed.

    So perhaps intuition is a different form of management to logic-based analysis.

    .
  • 24 MAY 2010
    Mitch McCrimmon
    Managing Partner
    Self Renewal Group
    Toronto, Canada

    ...decision making is based much more on experiment than this discussion reveals. We decide what house to buy mainly by looking at houses, not by prior analysis....

    .
    Mitch McCrimmon
    Managing Partner
    Self Renewal Group
    Toronto, Canada

    Interesting reference to John Wayne style leadership, that leaders need to make strong, independent decisions, like John Wayne. It is mainly because of this heroic model of leadership that we need to discuss the risks of intuition or any such individualistic decision making modes.

    I also think that decision making is based much more on experiment than this discussion reveals. We decide what house to buy mainly by looking at houses, not by prior analysis. In a complex world, there is little hope of avoiding risk. Many decisions can only be made through trial and error, interacting with the real world.

    .
  • 19 APRIL 2010
    Pramod Krishnamurthy
    EVP
    Fullerton India Credit Co Ltd
    Mumbai India

    I’m not so sure about the practical utility of a pre-mortem....

    .
    Pramod Krishnamurthy
    EVP
    Fullerton India Credit Co Ltd
    Mumbai India

    I’m not so sure about the practical utility of a pre-mortem. In a typical difficult strategic decision, there are usually a whole bunch of things that could go wrong. Listing these is easy, but knowing which of them will carry what kind of “weight” in the course of future events is very difficult. Said another way, it’s virtually impossible to know which hurdle will actually trip us up on the obstacle course.

    .
  • 6 APRIL 2010
    Ed Sikolia
    Senior Consultant
    IBM
    Washington DC USA

    There was reference to a pilot’s checklist, which I liked. Intuition, or a gut feeling, is only as good as the underlying “due diligence”....

    .
    Ed Sikolia
    Senior Consultant
    IBM
    Washington DC USA

    There was reference to a pilot’s checklist, which I liked. Intuition, or a gut feeling, is only as good as the underlying “due diligence”. A completed pilot’s checklist denotes a diligent completion of confidence building processes, necessary for a safe flight. The pilot’s ultimate decision to “rotate” and lift off the ground, is purely a validation of the trust he or she puts in the “due diligence” that is the completed checklist. It, by no means, guarantees that nothing can go wrong, as we often have seen.

    .
  • 6 APRIL 2010
    Giles Keeble
    London UK

    ...The idea of a premortem sounds interesting, but in a creative environment I would worry that it is more likely to lead to turning down ideas or to paralysis...

    .
    Giles Keeble
    London UK

    I run a course on judging communications for marketeers. There are a number of critical points: one is that there are a number of judgement points along the way, not just a decision about the actual communications ‘idea’; another is the importance of agreed criteria; and another is that gut feel is important but that you must examine it—fear is the more likely reaction to something original (and therefore not seen before) but originality is what can make the difference. I also suggest there are 3 areas they need to be aware of and bring to bear: themselves, their experiences, culture, and ambitions; their company’s processes and tools; and the market, including the consumer, the competiton and trends, etcetera. This is, in a sense, an attempt to get all involved to acknowledge bias and also to consider all relevant factors.

    The idea of a premortem sounds interesting, but in a creative environment I would worry that it is more likely to lead to turning down ideas or to paralysis: it seems to be a process of finding reasons why not rather than reasons why. It is always much easier to find problems than to find positives. On another point, there are huge opportunities in creative presentation meetings for correlated errors. I try to suggest that people capture their reactions independently first so that, even if the boss prevails, there is a ‘collective intuition’ to use for judgement.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    Gary Klein, a cognitive psychologist and senior scientist at MacroCognition, responds:

    There is a trade-off between encouraging new ideas and providing critical evaluation of them. We need to do both. I don’t imagine that Mr. Keeble is suggesting that ideas be turned into plans that should be implemented without any evaluation. The premortem is simply a way to accomplish the evaluation efficiently and effectively. It is also a way to reduce overconfidence.

    Mr. Keeble is correctly raising the concern that a premortem might be too effective and diminish confidence to a point that the morale of the team suffers. We also worry about that effect. The last activity in premortem sessions is to ask the team members to look at the concerns they have identified and then to have each team member volunteer one action that he or she will take to reduce the chance that the plan will lead to a fiasco. My experience is that this final premortem activity establishes team commitment—a commitment that is now based on a more thoughtful assessment of the plan, and a commitment that is more credible given the demonstration of the team members that they are willing to speak up about the things that worry them.

    OUR REPLY
  • 6 APRIL 2010
    Stephen Kishore
    Quality Performance Improvement
    First Gulf Bank
    Abu Dhabi, UAE

    ...Data, what they mean, need not be numbers all the time. It is the information that they can get out of experience in a certain field or industry, which is abundant...

    .
    Stephen Kishore
    Quality Performance Improvement
    First Gulf Bank
    Abu Dhabi, UAE

    Very interesting to get the views of the experts in the field on the point of discussion. Data, what they mean, need not be numbers all the time. It is the information that they can get out of experience in a certain field or industry, which is abundant unless we head to the space.

    I am amused that the same quality tools were given used by providing different titles. premortem - FMEA, Eliminated Correlated errors - Affinity diagrams. I strongly agree with the pro chief executive idea bias. People prefer to align with ideas of CEOs and provide data which supports his hypothesis and denounce ideas coming against it. I would say using “what if” would provide you more scenarios to work with rather than using just “premortem.”

    .
  • 6 APRIL 2010
    Rajeev Singh
    GM-HR
    BG India
    Mumbai India

    ...it is always better to get your “gut feel” validated by someone other than yourself before acting on it. In reality, many times a leader’s overconfidence or similar experience in past does not allow such a validation process.

    .
    Rajeev Singh
    GM-HR
    BG India
    Mumbai India

    Interesting insight by Daniel and Gary. In my view, having a “gut feel” is the start of biased approach in any decision making or even in a meeting, therefore, it is always better to get your “gut feel” validated by someone other than yourself before acting on it. In reality, many times a leader’s overconfidence or similar experience in past does not allow such a validation process.

    .
  • 5 APRIL 2010
    Bill Swanson
    Founder - Managing Director
    Inolytx
    Laguna Hills, CA USA

    ...I noticed neither Gary nor Daniel discussed if there is an association between the power of building a data driven story to exploit one’s ownership of a mental data picture [model] and reaching an improved, intuition-based decision....

    .
    Bill Swanson
    Founder - Managing Director
    Inolytx
    Laguna Hills, CA USA

    The story examples linked to the thought comments painted interesting mental pictures for the reader; gaining context into a discovery option. What I found absent was in the areas that pointed to the use of data and its relative importance to the process of trusting your gut. I noticed neither Gary nor Daniel discussed if there is an association between the power of building a data driven story to exploit one’s ownership of a mental data picture [model] and reaching an improved, intuition-based decision. I would enjoy a follow-on discussion with Gary and Daniel on building story / mental pictures using data-driven content in the decision process.

    .
  • 5 APRIL 2010
    Tim Wright
    CEO
    Wright Results
    Austin, TX USA

    The premortem should be a priori in every major decision-making or project planning situation....

    .
    Tim Wright
    CEO
    Wright Results
    Austin, TX USA

    The premortem should be a priori in every major decision-making or project planning situation. The human psyche reacts to problems by posing solutions. The more a team (leadership or otherwise) views failure scenarios in advance, the sharper their decisions, the more productive their projects, and the fewer their actual failures.

    .
  • 4 APRIL 2010
    Venkata Girija Kumar Angara
    General Manger
    National Insurance Inc
    Kolkata, India

    When dealing with extreme uncertainity, I believe a leader has to be wired to promptly think of the “unthinkable”...

    .
    Venkata Girija Kumar Angara
    General Manger
    National Insurance Inc
    Kolkata, India

    When dealing with extreme uncertainity, I believe a leader has to be wired to promptly think of the “unthinkable,” and—to put it in a Cricketer’s parlance—the “Doosra,” the “Googly,” and the “Reverse Swing.” No doubt, unusual situations in business call for original solutions. This obviously sounds like a prescription for a near-crisis situation. But when there is no threat to survival, and more so when year after year the financial statements dutifully report ‘a state of pink health’ and the entire organisational apparatus is in a state of relaxation, the leader has to bring to bear his thinking prowess to shift the organisational gears to facilitate moving to a higher, differentialy strategic trajectory. This is where he is going to depend on his intuition and, of course, there he will encounter resistance because he is moving the system out of its “comfort” shackle. It is my conviction that in such a situation for quite some time when he is almost a loner, he should effectively ask his team players to argue with him (like Socrates did). Premortem follows. Decorrelation and debias will permeate the thinking layers of the organisation.

    .
  • 1 APRIL 2010
    James Stanford
    Managing Partner
    The Stanford Group
    Danville, CA USA

    ...When I sense a mismatch between my analytical mind and intuition, I take a step back and look for more data and/or reasons of why they’re not aligned.

    .
    James Stanford
    Managing Partner
    The Stanford Group
    Danville, CA USA

    Both experts provided valuable input—I couldn’t choose a side. I “perceive” intuition as a “collective wisdom”. When I didn’t follow my instincts and intuition I got into trouble no matter how logical the decision sounded at that time or people around me genuinely supported the idea. No doubt however, a well-rounded and objective analysis is a must before making an important decision. When I sense a mismatch between my analytical mind and intuition, I take a step back and look for more data and/or reasons of why they’re not aligned.

    .
  • 1 APRIL 2010
    Dinyar Gilder
    Head - Business Excellence
    Tata Communications Transformation Services Ltd
    India

    ...I find it curious that the scholars spoke a lot about how to get data to back instincts and intuition. I would assume that intuition would be used only in the absence of further data....

    .
    Dinyar Gilder
    Head - Business Excellence
    Tata Communications Transformation Services Ltd
    India

    Seeing the title of the article, I was really interested in reading what the experts had to say on the topic. This is particularly so since, in my opinion, there are very few decisions for which there is 100% accurate data available. Intuition and experience then provide the rest of the input in the decision-making process. I find it curious that the scholars spoke a lot about how to get data to back instincts and intuition. I would assume that intuition would be used only in the absence of further data. Further, the ‘premortem’ is what I know as FMEA (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis) technique which tries to proactively identify the possible ways that something could fail.

    .
  • 31 MARCH 2010
    Sanjeev Himachali
    Owner
    India

    ...When you do extensive research or debate to support your thoughts, then that doesn’t remain your “gut feeling” but becomes a “well-researched strategic plan”....

    .
    Sanjeev Himachali
    Owner
    India

    I enjoyed this discussion. However, as always, I believe that we are living in an information age and information is flowing from every direction. There are very few articles and discussions that have universal or global application and hence the onus is on the audience and readers to actually validate and verify the application of proposed concepts in their industry or company.

    As far as this discussion is concerned, I doubt if these concepts can be accepted in totality by everyone across the business world, irrespective of the type of company that they have and their global location. I also think that the phrase “gut feeling” is kind of misfit here, or maybe I am wrong. I define “gut feeling” as your inner-voice that provokes you to attempt something that you have not tried before. It is your “momentarily impulsive thinking” that pushes you forward. It may have some relation with your past-experiences or it may be a virgin thought of your sixth sense. If that is “gut feeling” then that need not to be researched extensively or brainstormed or debated. When you do extensive research or debate to support your thoughts, then that doesn’t remain your “gut feeling” but becomes a “well-researched strategic plan”.

    However, I did like the concepts of pre-mortem, correlated errors and, hypothesis testing, checklists, low and high validity, and I believe, if executed and implemented properly, these can help many organizations in successfully implementing many high-value projects.

    .
  • 31 MARCH 2010
    Nick Lethbridge
    Polemicist
    Agamedes Consulting
    Australia

    Several comments question the meaning of “intuition”. I see it as being to one end of an information-knowledge scale....

    .
    Nick Lethbridge
    Polemicist
    Agamedes Consulting
    Australia

    Several comments question the meaning of “intuition”. I see it as being to one end of an information-knowledge scale. (1) At one extreme, you have so little information that your decisions are really just guesses. (2) So you gather a lot of “information” but not enough knowledge of the situation to make a valid decision. (3) With “knowledge” you are able to apply your information to make effective decisions. (4) As you gain “expertise”—depth and breadth of information and knowledge—you can make better and faster decisions but find it difficult to explain your reasoning to people with less expertise.

    Expertise involves knowledge which, to the non-expert, could only be reached by a complex chain of reasoning; the expert has already internalised the chain and leaps instantly from start to finish. (5) With “intuition” you are able to leap from start to finish of a complex chain of reasoning — without ever having followed the chain. This makes for rapid decision making under uncertainty, though you may not be able to explain your logic, even to yourself. A key role of senior management is to make these intuitive decisions: if we had perfect information and perfect knowledge then experts could quickly make perfect decisions; there would be no need for managers to make decisions.

    Intuitive decision making may also lead to “superstitious” learning, where one or two good results teach you that your reasoning was valid, despite the gaps in the logic. A good manager will recognise that this information-knowledge scale is circular... (6/1) If you depend entirely on intuition then your decisions are really just guesses. In extreme uncertainty, intuition is essential. Then you gather more information and knowledge, become an expert under the new conditions, and are ready to use intuition when the future becomes uncertain... in a different way.

    .
  • 30 MARCH 2010
    Alberto Fayos
    Innovation Manager
    GTD Sistemas de Información, S.A.
    Barcelona, Spain

    Would “pre-mortem technique” and risk management be the same?

    .
    Alberto Fayos
    Innovation Manager
    GTD Sistemas de Información, S.A.
    Barcelona, Spain

    Would “pre-mortem technique” and risk management be the same?

    .
  • 30 MARCH 2010
    Mike Cahill
    Vice President
    The Future Knowledge Group
    Pacifica, CA USA

    I am quite surprised with the fairly low level of rigor in this conversation about about the nature and value of objectivity....

    .
    Mike Cahill
    Vice President
    The Future Knowledge Group
    Pacifica, CA USA

    I am quite surprised with the fairly low level of rigor in this conversation about the nature and value of objectivity. We advise intelligence agencies on scenario creation, and at the most sophisticated level of such creations, it is well known that the most aggressive and widely understood method of determining the objective quality of knowledge statements is to assign probabilities to them. I am quite surprised that this discussion does not embrace or even mention such best practices.

    Decision Makers need methodologies that allow them to rigorously decompose strategic and tactical knowledge entities, but this is not difficult to teach. Then, and this is most discouraging about this discussion between two “experts”, managers need to be taught that there are, at minimum, three different kinds of probability that can be assigned to their knowledge statements: physical, subjective, and epistemic. Without these primitive insights, rational hopes for “objective” strategic insights are not high.

    .
  • 30 MARCH 2010
    Keehong Lu
    Performance Consultant
    Integrated Performance Associates (iPA)
    Singapore

    ...it is in the area of ‘challenging and gaining agreement on the assumptions’ that the leaders and their people must work on.

    .
    Keehong Lu
    Performance Consultant
    Integrated Performance Associates (iPA)
    Singapore

    When we strategize, we gaze into the future and make assumptions and create, as appropriate, an action plan with the objective of producing a desired outcome. Nothing is for certain. While the leaders must have a vision of the future, they will need to let the experts that work for and with them to generate the numbers with the ‘agreed assumptions’ and assess if the desired outcome is likely to be achieved or not. This must be done as the leaders are not experts in all the fields of expertise that are mandatory to reduce the risk of ‘rushing into making decisions’ without the benefit of turning data into information (i.e. to prevent DRIP - Data Rich but Information Poor!) and leveraging on the collective wisdom. Hence, it is in the area of ‘challenging and gaining agreement on the assumptions’ that the leaders and their people must work on.

    To avoid the natural human tendency to favour one’s own ideas, it is useful to use the ‘Black Hat’ technique of Ed de Bono’s 6-Hat Thinking to consider: what could make the assumptions bad? This is very much like the ‘premortem’ mentioned in this article. The challenge is: is the organizational culture agreeable to ‘knocking ideas that originated from the leaders?’ To this end, we can go back to an old concept called: Johari Window; or a simpler one: “The emperor’s new clothes.” Will the leaders allow the people to really knock the ideas around? Do they have the personal integrity and confidence to let the experts do their critical analysis? Of course, ultimately the leaders have to make the decision. The buck stops with them.

    Finally, I liked the distinction between high-validity and low-validity environment though in a strategic move, it would normally fall under the ‘low-validity’ environment as even when you do the nth merger, the company and the people you are taking over are not the same.

    .
  • 30 MARCH 2010
    Leodegardo Pruna
    Volunteer Adviser
    PBSP-Business Advisory Program
    Philippines

    ...What should take place is for a decision maker to get less and less personal and more and more professional about handling processes leading to decision making. This would reduce friction and eventually biases and conflicts....

    .
    Leodegardo Pruna
    Volunteer Adviser
    PBSP-Business Advisory Program
    Philippines

    Prof. Kahneman mentioned that most decision makers would trust their own intuitions rather than listen to others and that is well accepted and recognized. What should take place is for a decision maker to get less and less personal and more and more professional about handling processes leading to decision making. This would reduce friction and eventually biases and conflicts. I am with Prof. Klein in his advocacy of quality meetings characterized by openness and the welfare of the organization on top of personal persuasions and that issues which seem contrary to the position of the executive should be positively addressed and recognized. This way, embarrassing situations leading to hurt feelings could be avoided. The interview with the professors truly was very enlightening. We hope to have more of this kind of discourse.

    .
  • 30 MARCH 2010
    Elsie Maio
    President
    Maio&Co
    New York, NY USA

    Three provocative reminders stand out here for leaders who would be authentic and effective—and for the CMOs and other masters of communication who support them...

    .
    Elsie Maio
    President
    Maio&Co
    New York, NY USA

    Three provocative reminders stand out here for leaders who would be authentic and effective—and for the CMOs and other masters of communication who support them:

    1. Good stories—like “great branding”—can be misleading traps, if it’s true that a good story engenders confidence even when facts are far away, so link ‘em up.

    2. The most important time to eliminate bias in decisions is “when you decide what information needs to be collected”—so get an outside opinion.

    3. A self-image as ‘the smartest guys in the room’ is a big problem when it takes courage and commitment to the truth to say, “I don’t know and am curious to find out.” That presumes we’re not invested in being right personally but in making the best decisions we can for our constituents. Boards can accelerate the evolution to authentic leadership by visibly reinforcing the components of this new model in recruitment and c-suite performance standards.

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Alessandro Daliana
    Principal
    Chokti Inc.
    New York, NY USA

    ...Notwithstanding the stature of both gentlemen, I somehow get the impression that “intuition” is defined or correlated with pattern recognition....

    .
    Alessandro Daliana
    Principal
    Chokti Inc.
    New York, NY USA

    Unfortunately, this interview leaves me feeling slightly uneasy. Notwithstanding the stature of both gentlemen, I somehow get the impression that “intuition” is defined or correlated with pattern recognition. When discussing high- and low-validity situations, what is in effect underlying this concept is patterns. A person’s ability to make a good decision is quite rightly based on their ability to identify a pattern that can readily fit a mental model they have developed in their head. If the situation is highly unknown to them then it will be more difficult for them to make a good decision as their models don’t work well. The reverse is true as well. Leaders are perceived as leaders mostly because they can discern these patterns more readily than others and consequently act upon these insights more quickly. By the same token, these decisions must also be identifiable by those being led, albeit further along in time, otherwise the leader will be ousted. So, I would like to suggest that the concept of pattern recognition be used by your reads as a framework to better help them understand the ideas expressed herein.

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Neil Reay
    CMO
    Impact Consulting
    Lehi, UT USA

    I think there is another issue that clouds executive gut-based decision-making. Too many executives want to claim their leadership and historical position by creating a ‘legacy decision,’...

    .
    Neil Reay
    CMO
    Impact Consulting
    Lehi, UT USA

    I think there is another issue that clouds executive gut-based decision-making. Too many executives want to claim their leadership and historical position by creating a ‘legacy decision,’ whether it is justified or not. The decision must be big and striking, so there can be no question as to who the Alpha Leader is now. Mergers, downsizing, and spinoffs quickly fall into this category, as do major new product market entries. Similarly, when a new leader comes in to replace a disgraced or unsuccessful leader, rather than first stabilize the situation, the first move is often to take dramatic opposing action to show that I’m not that other guy.

    A similar action is evident in the recent political healthcare debate and actions. Rather than tackle a major issue involving one-sixth of the economy in a series of measured steps, the choice was made to pursue the legacy legislation as a lifetime achievement for many Democratic leaders. Such a course has led to poorly understood legislation, inadequate funding, a hardening of positions between parties, and attempts to seek repeal before the legislation even can become effective. The opportunity for achieving any meaningful success in this important and necessary area has been lost, as well as all opportunity for future collaboration between parties.

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Andrew Campbell
    Ashridge Business School
    London, UK

    This is such an important topic and these are two of my heroes on this subject. But, I was a little disappointed with this exchange. I think it might have been because of correlated errors....

    .
    Andrew Campbell
    Ashridge Business School
    London, UK

    This is such an important topic and these are two of my heroes on this subject. But, I was a little disappointed with this exchange. I think it might have been because of correlated errors. Gary and Daniel may have been influencing each other without realising it to be more in agreement than they really are. For example, Daniel talks about trying to postpone intuition, which makes no sense when seen through Gary’s “recognition primed decision model”. Intuition, in the form of unconscious mental processing, is at work from the moment we start thinking about something, so we are not able to control it.

    I was also disappointed that Gary and Daniel did not give more focus to the design of the decision process. They did comment on the importance of meetings and of data collection, but my research suggests that certain kinds of biases can only be dealt with by careful design of the decision process: data, people in the decision group, process the decision group goes through, people in the governance group, process the governance group goes through and process for monitoring/learning after the decison has been made. For example, when faced with self-interest as a bias, we do not recommend pre-mortems or better meeting behaviours or more data, we ask the individuals to leave the decision group or we discount their contributions. In other words, faced with a bias that has deep roots in emotions and the subconscious, we take real decisive action on the decision process rather than using check lists and training on anchoring. We should treat the other biases with the same respect: recognise how powerfully they can disrupt our judgments and design the decision process to reduce the risk of a disaster.

    There is one other aspect of this area I want to comment on. I have just been through a situation where I made a really bad decision. And the real problem was that I did not stop and say “this is a decision”. My intuition made me feel as though I was just “doing the right thing”. Like Gary’s firemen, I did not think of myself as making a decision. So one of the skills is to recognise that a decision is being made. For example, Tony Blair never put the issue of going to war in Iraq to the British Cabinet. There were many discussions, but not a decision meeting. The same happened with the Royal Bank of Scotland’s decision to acquire ABNAmro. One board member told me that they had 17 meetings at which the deal was discussed. But all of the meetings were about how to do the deal, not whether to do the deal.

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Magnus Petersson
    Case Officer
    Swedish Ministry of Enterprise and Communication
    Stockholm, Sweden

    ...I think it would be fair to say that premortem thinking is part of being a good legal officer or a lawyer. Having said that I really agree with the conclusion that this way of thinking should be used more...

    .
    Magnus Petersson
    Case Officer
    Swedish Ministry of Enterprise and Communication
    Stockholm, Sweden

    Thank you for a very interesting interview! I don’t work in an enterprise but I still recognize the situations and problems discussed. The final thoughts I think are key to not just only good decision making but also to creating a healthy working environment. However, regarding the premortem I think that idea—contrary to what is argued in the article—is not at all a revolutionizing way of thinking. In my previous job as a legal officer at a government agency me and my colleagues always applied the premortem thinking. The premortem is part of introducing new regulations, you always have to identify everything that could go wrong if you introduced a certain regulation, otherwise it would’nt be effective. I think it would be fair to say that premortem thinking is part of being a good legal officer or a lawyer. Having said that I really agree with the conclusion that this way of thinking should be used more often by decision makers.

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Shreesh Sarvagya
    General Manager - Corporate Communication
    Reliance Industries
    Mumbai, India

    ...It is also the presence of good intentions that empowers executives to put in passion and intensity behind a decision, factors that make things happen.

    .
    Shreesh Sarvagya
    General Manager - Corporate Communication
    Reliance Industries
    Mumbai, India

    Superb insights! However, I also feel the reason many executives end up making wrong decisions in the name of using intuition has something to do with the understanding of the what intuition is all about. In crisis communication, for instance, often there are absolutely unknown situations. No amount of validation with previously prepared checklists can help unless the professional brings into play his or her intuition, which is rarely if ever an informed way of looking at the situation. To the extent intuitive reasoning is concerned with human psychology, I am personally convinced that good intentions (whatever those two words mean to the reader) are the only support systems for an expert in a dangerous situation. It is also the presence of good intentions that empowers executives to put in passion and intensity behind a decision, factors that make things happen.

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Ro Gorell
    MD
    ascent2change.co.uk
    Berks, UK

    It would be interesting to know what Daniel and Gary mean by ‘intuition.’...

    .
    Ro Gorell
    MD
    ascent2change.co.uk
    Berks, UK

    It would be interesting to know what Daniel and Gary mean by ‘intuition’. The concepts of social proofing and the influence of authority are aspects of the social psyche that affect we humans both in and outside the work environment. The term ‘premortem’ is great and suggests that using coaching tools and techniques to help organisations make strategic decisions is the way to go. We can never be free from our social conditioning but we can be aware of it. And awareness, as they say, is the first step to recovery!

    .
  • 29 MARCH 2010
    Darren Agombar
    Director
    Claradan
    Poole, UK

    ...An excellent way to debias oneself and to retain leadership is to seek independent research and advice from outside the organisation, a fresh perspective can then be considered without the biases that usually permeate such environments.

    .
    Darren Agombar
    Director
    Claradan
    Poole, UK

    Yes, leaders rely on their instincts and yes those instincts are often trusted by large organisations—they usually become leaders in the first place because their track record has proven successful. However, this is a strategy that can very quickly go wrong, often the reason leaders get replaced. Leaders that learn to ask questions without compromising their authority generally have longevity.

    What is interesting about the current environment is that it fits a classic description of risk and uncertainty and we have witnessed examples of instinctive decision making that have failed; including Bear Stearns, Lehman, BOA’s purchase of Countrywide; and examples of instinctive decision making that have been successful, such as the US Treasury and Federal Reserve handling of the crisis.

    An excellent way to debias oneself and to retain leadership is to seek independent research and advice from outside the organisation, a fresh perspective can then be considered without the biases that usually permeate such environments.

    .
Submit Your Comments

The user information you enter into this form will not update your site profile. To update your profile, please visit your profile page.

Subject Strategic decisions: When can you trust your gut?

*Required

We may publish your comments online and in the print edition of McKinsey Quarterly. Those chosen, which may be edited for length and clarity, will appear along with your name and details, but not your e-mail address. We will use your e-mail address only to send you a confirmation copy of your comments and to notify you if we publish them online.

We value your feedback and will consider it carefully. Nonetheless, we receive so many comments that we cannot acknowledge all of them.

See also:
Preview

Special package: Seeing through biases instrategic decisions
This article is part of a McKinsey Quarterly package on improving strategic decision making. Read others from the collection:

The case for behavioral strategy
Learn how to counter the subconscious biases that undermine strategic decision making.

How we do it: Three executives reflect on strategic decision making
Balancing timely action with thorough, unbiased decision processes is critical.

How to test your decision-making instincts
Executives should trust their gut instincts—but only when four tests are met.

Taking the bias out of meetings
Managing bias effectively can help lessen the impact it has on your company’s strategy.
Embed E-mail