Below are various types of safeguards, organized by category with examples for each:
1. Exposing Decision Makers to New Experiences
- Arrange customer visits or field days.
- Assign executives to information-gathering roles (e.g., R&D, marketing).
- Regularly share industry information with key stakeholders.
- Enhance the flow of real-time data to executives.
- Appoint advisers with diverse experiences to challenge the decision-making process.
2. Leveraging Expertise Within and Outside the Organization
- Engage internal experts or team members from different departments for specialized analyses.
- Conduct interviews with external experts with unique perspectives.
- Hire external consultants with specialized knowledge.
- Acquire industry reports, market studies, or commission external analyses.
3. Utilizing Analytical Tools and Approaches
- Incorporate case studies, industry analogies, life-cycle analyses, and learnings from others’ experiences.
- Evaluate key assumptions through targeted analysis.
- Focus on specific elements of the classical decision-making process (e.g., reframing problems, defining criteria, exploring options, discussing assumptions, and planning implementation).
- Conduct in-depth analyses on areas of uncertainty, especially where experience is limited (e.g., testing key assumptions, analyzing risk/return trade-offs).
- Investigate any anomalies or unexpected results (e.g., interpreting weak signals).
4. Stress Testing and Scenario Planning
- Pressure test solutions by adjusting downside scenarios (e.g., adding 25% to the worst-case projections).
- Create simulations to predict the outcomes of different choices.
- Use challenging data and analyses to question ingrained assumptions or biases.
- Encourage decision-makers to identify weaknesses in their own arguments.
- Apply counterintuitive analogies or case studies to challenge critical assumptions.
- Start from a “blank slate” to reframe problems and explore alternative options.
5. Incorporating External and Provocative Perspectives
- Commission studies from individuals or groups without emotional ties to the decision-makers (e.g., evaluating less-preferred options).
- Use “frame-breaking” techniques such as scenario analysis or competitive gaming to challenge conventional perspectives.
- Prompt decision-makers to consider how a competitor or startup might disrupt their business, encouraging new frames or options.
- Organize competitive simulations or war games to engage decision-makers in exploring different outcomes.
Here are safeguards organized by category with examples for each:
1. Encouraging Diverse Viewpoints
- Gather collective experience to explore and stimulate a variety of perspectives.
- Go around the table, asking each member to share their views or express concerns.
- Hold meetings that focus on discussing key uncertainties in the decision (e.g., market attractiveness, competitive advantages, environmental factors, competitor threats).
- Organize sessions to discuss core elements of the decision-making process (e.g., framing, options, judgments, and implementation challenges).
- Facilitate brainstorming on frames, options, criteria, and other key aspects.
2. Enhancing Group Dynamics and Participation
- Introduce a facilitator to guide discussions.
- Alter the group structure to create fresh dynamics (e.g., switch from formal to informal settings or split the group into subgroups).
- Minimize status differences and protocol to foster psychological safety, making members more comfortable challenging prevailing opinions.
- Introduce new members with diverse perspectives.
- Include internal experts, external consultants, or implementers in the decision group.
3. Expanding Communication and Participation
- Increase communication within and outside the decision group to broaden perspectives and enhance challenges.
- Conversely, remove disruptive or “problem” members to improve group dynamics.
- Encourage decision-makers to reflect on their emotional biases and assumptions.
- Present outcomes using objective metrics (e.g., NPV, risk/return comparisons) with key assumptions highlighted.
4. Leveraging External and Confidential Perspectives
- Pair senior decision-makers with others who have complementary patterns of thinking.
- Engage a confidential adviser (e.g., a board member, trusted consultant, investment banker, or HR professional) to challenge decision-makers.
- Provide training on decision-making traps to improve group awareness.
5. Structuring Roles and Processes for Effective Debate
- Customize roles and responsibilities to draw out new and relevant viewpoints.
- Assign individuals or subgroups specific roles within the decision-making process (e.g., role-playing exercises, contrasting perspectives).
- Set common goals for the group to encourage alignment in the decision process.
6. Challenging Assumptions and Prevailing Wisdom
- Encourage managers to think like business owners when analyzing decisions.
- Design processes that foster conflict between differing viewpoints.
- Organize sessions focused on identifying new frames, options, and criteria.
- Incorporate steps specifically aimed at challenging the prevailing wisdom.
7. Collecting and Analyzing Input Privately
- Gather opinions privately (e.g., through interviews or questionnaires) and review findings with the group.
- Conduct surveys or email structured questionnaires to stakeholders outside the decision group to gather their views.
- Use secret voting or similar techniques to reveal differing opinions.
8. Facilitating Constructive Challenge
- Employ an external facilitator or chairman to ensure challenges are recognized and addressed within the group discussion.
Below are governance safeguards organized by type with examples for each:
1. Enhancing Expertise and Perspective
- Add individuals with expertise relevant to the uncertainties at hand (e.g., international markets, implementation needs).
- Include individuals with different emotional connections, such as those without biases or attachments to the status quo.
2. Strengthening Data and Analysis
- Request additional data and analysis beyond what the decision group typically provides.
- Build connections with individuals in the organization who can offer background information and informed opinions.
- Commission independent reviews to gain objective insights.
3. Encouraging Rigorous Scrutiny
- Ask probing and challenging questions.
- Strengthen the governance process to introduce more rigorous review and challenge.
- Form a subcommittee to preview and evaluate proposals.
- Allocate more time to debating critical aspects of the decision (e.g., business context, framing, options, criteria).
4. Increasing Oversight and Control
- Add extra layers of governance, such as additional reviews or meetings with key stakeholders.
- Require decisions to be revisited and reviewed at specific stage gates.
- Regularly assess and adjust the overall decision-making process.
5. Enhancing Monitoring and Red Flag Detection
- Request reports on the decision group and the process they follow.
- Develop a checklist of potential red flags, with recommended safeguards.
- Assign a governance team member to observe the decision-making process as a “fly on the wall.”
6. Testing Commitment and Challenging the Proposal
- Adopt an assertive and challenging style during reviews.
- Test the commitment of the decision group to the proposed course of action.
- Initially reject the decision to prompt further refinement and analysis.
Below are monitoring safeguards organized by category with examples for each:
1. Testing Commitment and Accountability
- Preannounce a monitoring process to gauge commitment.
- Clearly define performance metrics to track progress.
- Implement a postaudit process for all major decisions.
- Announce a special postaudit or reporting process for critical decisions.
- Directly link decision outcomes to compensation and rewards.
2. Reviewing and Adjusting Decisions
- Establish a formal review process and adjust the decision based on results.
- Request a prototype or trial phase with specific performance benchmarks.
- Use gated funding approaches (e.g., similar to those in the pharmaceutical industry).
3. Enhancing Responsiveness and Flexibility
- Strengthen the ability to respond to emerging results during implementation.
- Assemble a strong implementation team to oversee execution.
- Improve learning and adaptability throughout the implementation process.
- Build in optionality to allow for flexible outcomes based on changing circumstances.