Biases are most commonly visible in how a leader communicates. Being mindful about our words is critical to thinking and communicating objectively.
While attended a very interesting workshop a
few weeks ago on the topic of “Unconscious Bias” facilitated by Smita Tharoor.
I was interested in this topic because I explored the intersection of critical
thinking and leadership a few years ago. This was a good opportunity to get
back to the topic and add to my understanding.
What is Unconscious Bias
The term ‘cognitive bias’ was coined by Amos
Tversky and Daniel Kahneman in 1972 which quite simply means “our tendency to
filter information, process facts and arrive at judgments based on our past
experiences, likes/dislikes and automatic influences.”
How do these biases show up in Leadership?
A lot of leadership is about taking decisions
involving group of people. Instinctive leaders often tend to decide quickly
based on limited information or experience they have at hand. The result is
that they end up taking wrong decisions (which may have worked for them in past
but may not work in a different context), or discriminating with people of a
certain color, race, sex or nationality based on their past experiences with
similar people. At work, biases (or the
perception of bias) is the biggest contributor to people engagement and cost of
disengagement is huge. Lack of critical thinking also leads to short-termism
where decisions are taken for immediate gains and solutions of today become
thorny problems of tomorrow.
Some Ways to Deal with Unconscious Bias
Get Conscious. Be more aware about
unconscious cognitive biases. Knowing that they exist is the first important
step to tackling them. And they exist in plenty. Here is a list of all
unconscious biases and what they really mean.
Ask questions, often. When considering a
decision, ask questions that elicit understanding and clarify details. When you
ask questions, you extend an opportunity to others to really express them. You
are extending an opportunity to yourself to understand their thinking more
closely. Encourage a culture where asking questions is valued.
Look for Patterns. Data over a period of time
reveals patterns. Looking for patterns from the results of past decision can
lead to important insights and learning. Sometimes data can blind us unless we
learn to look at the pattern and story behind the data.
Look for the contrary. It helps playing a
devil’s advocate and taking a contrarian view of things. It not only challenges
others to think harder but also helps you in really understanding if they are
just defending their own biases.
Embrace Diversity. This starts with hiring
decisions. Don’t hire people whose beliefs are compliant with yours. You will
tap into diverse ideas and viewpoints only when you have people with diverse
thinking patterns on your team.
Attend to data and evidences. When you ask
your people to bring data, evidences and trends, it does not mean lack of trust.
It only means that you are intentional about serving them better by taking the
right decisions.
Communicate clearly. Clear and accurate
communication is a leader’s tool #1. Avoid using generic terms to describe
people, situations and things. Biases are most commonly visible in how a leader
communicates. Being mindful about our words is critical to thinking and
communicating objectively.