Stanford GSB: Mean Co-Workers Make Sense…

It turns out that modern corporate life is a justification in and of itself for people to be self-interested “jerks”…

While I’m not sure I fully agree (idealist that I am), some researchers at the Stanford Graduate School of Business have studied the phenomenon.

YOUR LINK

The operative passage from researcher Jeffrey Pfeffer, a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford GSB:

“People need to take care of themselves,” Pfeffer says. “They need to stop looking for this mythical Santa Claus that’s going to be nice to them.” To the suggestion that this was a depressing assessment of cubicle life, Pfeffer responded, “what I find more depressing is instances when people misplace their faith and trust in organizations—when people who think their company will look after them meet horrible consequences.”

Amen to the concept of horrible consequences waiting in the wings for those who don’t align the values they espouse with the values that their organization upholds.  Amen to that indeed.

It’s an interesting and quick read, in any case.

 

How to Assess Your Next Leader

On objective measures, leaders can be easy to vet. Subjectively, I suggest one diligence question that trumps them all…

We talk and read a lot about professional values…Values that range from exceptional and humane performance to basic and simple ethics.

In many cases, it is just that: Talk and writing. Just like the platform I’m standing onright now, it’s far too easy these days to publish a bullet point list of things you thinkothers should do.

This article is for those who expect it to be more than words.

Leader evaluation…Some background

Having been a part of a few organizations that are styled more as talent markets–professional firms that dynamically mix management and subordinate talent into short term teams–than as classical hierarchical organizations, I’ve gained a point of view on leadership evaluation that is perhaps helpful to those who have spent their lives living in the lines and boxes world of static organizations.

One of the benefits of firms styled as talent markets is that people–particularly junior people–get to vote with their feet. They learn that working with a bad manager is not a bitter pill they have to swallow for career advancement.

Bad managers and leaders are weeded out either through formal processes (surveys, 360s, and feedback), or simply through word of mouth.

Another of the benefits is that people actually learn to do their due diligence on a leader. They learn to ask about style and substance in polite but penetrating ways, and to judge the reaction accordingly.

Most corporate environments operating with a hierarchical organization lack this component of “churn.” And, that can be a good thing. People become masters of their work more readily.

But, those same people can also become resigned to their own fate.

In a corporate environment, the vast majority of a person’s job satisfaction is based on the leader/manager/supervisor they work for. That can range from the CEO to a front-line supervisor leading a work team.

So, when considering a new job, a transfer, or a new company, employing some talent market-style due diligence tips can help you avoid a bad experience that can last a very long time.

The diligence list…

First, the basics of leader evaluation. All of us should investigate basic performance and ethical values before joining a new leader.

Ideally, we do it with a mix of people who currently work with the leader, and who have previously worked with the leader.

In today’s world, it’s very easy to track down a few people who have close knowledge of an individual leader through prior interaction.

Some of the basic questions to ask include the following:

  • Does the leader perform?
  • Is the leader accountable to others?
  • Does the leader develop people?
  • What’s the leader’s style in conflict?
  • How does the leader handle competing factions?
  • How does the leader manage big and small things?
  • What is the leader’s track record of advancing peoples’ careers?
  • How does the leader engender trust?
  • Is the leader a clear thinker and direct communicator?

These are all “good” questions that anyone considering a new job should ask.

But they all leave out the litmus test of leadership: The re-buy.

That’s where my best advice comes in.

The kicker…One question to rule them all…

Here is the critical question. You might say I’ve buried the lead in this one, because it really is the one that matters.

The question you should consider asking when evaluating a new boss is this:

Would you want your son or daughter to work for this leader?

That’s it. That’s the simple question.

Why?

It creates emotional distance for the person answering it: They don’t have to admit they are an idiot for choosing or staying in a bad situation directly. They get an ego “out” by being able to say how different their situation is than what they would want for others.

It overcomes the endowment effect that we all suffer from when evaluating our current circumstances: We value where we are right now more than we would value it if had a clean slate to choose from. It’s a proven psychological fact. We make excuses for why we stay with our bad leader.

It gets to a fundamental question of humane values: A lot of people will walk through fire to provide for their families, and they will make every excuse and fully martyr themselves on their way to it.

But.

When you ask them if they would put their kids through it, it gets personal and protective.

Most people look for better lives for their kids; not lives lived making up for bad leadership.

How to use the responses

Listen for the nuance in the response.

A lot of leader diligence is about the meta knowledge you will gain. The more senior you are, the more politically savvy the respondent, the more you have to listen.

Namely, if people cannot answer your questions or will not offer a reference, you should wonder why. It tells you something if a person, particularly a very senior person, refuses to give a perspective on prior leaders.

In that case, keep asking others who have been on the path.

One caution: You can always, of course, ask the question about whether a reference would work with the leader again; but remember that chemistry matters. Sometimes people leave for good reasons that don’t have to do with bad leadership.

A parting thought:

I’ve used this sort of litmus test question in countless diligence discussions; and it has been used on me in even more of them. I view both of those things as a good thing.

I’ve gone against poor “mood music” on this sort of question in only a couple of instances.

Knowing the outcome of those choices, I can only say:

Take my best advice.

The New England Patriots and Uncanny Perfection

As the New England Patriots may be showing, the best evidence of a poseur, cheat, or a fraud is uncanny perfection.

This article is about how outlying behavior without explanation demands scrutiny. Perfection, or near perfection (especially if neatly calculated) is so uncommon as to be an indication of ill-dealing.

The NFL’s New England Patriots are only a prop. This applies to all of us.

Watch out for it.

Logical links to prior thoughts on this topic

Last year, I wrote on the use of Bayes’ Rule to uncover when enough evidence was enough to make a decision.

Link: When Enough is Enough

The thesis in that one was that one powerful indicator of deviant behavior or a long history of slight deviances were equally enough evidence to underpin a decision to promote, accelerate, or move on.

Last week, I wrote on the interesting (to me) ethical questions raised around the New England Patriot’s winning big while allegedly cheating in the AFC Championship game.

Link: Deflated Footballs and Minor Ethical Lapses

Many, many people claimed, and still claim, that the alleged cheating didn’t matter because it didn’t affect the outcome of the game.

My point was that process matters.

Nothing new there.

Now, there’s a fascinating bit of information on the New England Patriots that has come out that brings another ethical insight to light that combines these two theses.

Today, I get this link in my inbox. It’s an article picked up by Slate.com and written by a sports handicapper named Warren Sharp.

The link is to an analysis of team fumble rates in the NFL under different conditions. In a nutshell, it says that the New England Patriots have an uncanny and longstanding ability to avoid dropping the football. Here’s the operative quote:

Based on the assumption that fumbles per play follow a normal distribution, you’d expect to see, according to random fluctuation, the [fumble rate] results that the Patriots have gotten over this [2010 – 2014] period, once in 16,233.77 instances.

To quote Lloyd Christmas’ question: “So, you’re telling me there’s a chance?”

Yes, but a shockingly remote one.

The bigger chance is that the Patriots are different from other teams. They have figured out a competitive advantage. Conjoin that with the newest revelation of potential cheating by deflating balls, and a clear history of cheating in the franchise in the past, and?

The most likely explanation is that they have been cheating for years, acquiring a competitive advantage that is as immense as it is unlikely.

This isn’t about a single game whose outcome didn’t matter…But rather about longstanding, likely ill-gotten gains.

Sound familiar? Enough is enough.

Because it’s a global audience…a digression for the un-versed…

For those who aren’t versed in the cheating accusations against the Patriots, let me give the one sentence explanation:

The Patriot’s alleged use of deflated footballs would enable better grip by those players who handle the football, resulting in better control–especially in wet or slippery conditions–when throwing, catching, or running with the football and therefore a lower probability of drops, fumbles, and subsequently turnovers.

For those who don’t know, an American Football team’s turnover margin (that is the net number of times the ball is relinquished to or recovered from opponents through error) in a given game is an extremely powerful indicator of win likelihood. An advantage in grip on the ball is therefore significant.

The shocking, interesting, and applicable analysis

Mr. Sharp, in the midst of multiple cuts at the data, compiled this view of the NFL offenses’ fumble rates per play from scrimmage. I’m reproducing it here for commentary. The analysis is fully Mr. Warren Sharp’s.

Fumbles are the small circles, fumble rates (per play) are the orange boxes. New England is on the far right. Two things you notice immediately:

First, that New England (the far right side team) has a fumble per play rate that is in the stratosphere. They have a fumble every 187 plays. That’s truly exceptional (as the chart shows).

Second, as the article outlines, is that the next three best teams–the ones who even approach being outliers–are dome teams.

Not only is New England great at protecting the football, but they also do it better than teams with structural advantages that New England doesn’t have.

All of this is over a very long period of time (5 years) so “noise” should be shaken out of the analysis to a large degree.

Impressive? Yes. Fraudulent? Probably.

What the message is…

Such an analysis has real world applicability beyond the game of American Football. And, I’ll tell you why: If I told you that a team was so good at a key aspect of the game over the long run so as to be a near statistical impossibility, and then told you they had possibly been caught cheating in a way that would directly affect that aspect, what would be your conclusion?

The Patriots’ out-performance on fumbles is striking. Especially when you consider the conditions they often play under (in New England and outdoors). It’s akin to a company in a mature, commodity industry constantly and significantly outperforming companies in high value added, high growth industries. It can happen easily over the short term, and could possibly happen over the long term if the company were doing truly special things within the rules; but it deserves some scrutiny.

Statistical, financial, job performance, or any other kind of perfection should raise your fraud antenna in the first place. Combine it with observation of ethical “grayness” and you’d better watch out.

The message is that practical perfection should be applauded, but also scrutinized. The more perfect your investments, subordinates, or superiors are, the more you ought to ask the penetrating questions on why. The moment you observe lying, cheating, stealing, or (note this) aggressive isolation of people who decide to ask questions; you should be careful.

That isolation point is an important one: Remember when Jeff Skilling at Enron called an investment analyst an “asshole” on an investor conference call? The analyst only asked a practical question: Why couldn’t Enron produce a balance sheet?

Here’s a link to that episode.

It’s a fascinating moment in the unmasking of a fraud.

Interesting isn’t it?

This is especially important if you are the senior executive or board member who is benefitting from current ethical grayness.

Earnings look too perfect? Ask the question.

Reports on operations or people or sales too rosy? Ask the question.

I can assure you that Robert Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots, now wishes he would have asked a few questions over the past few years.

3 practical applications

I guess there’s a message here for people looking to ferret out or avoid being entangled within a fraud…Look for the quiet successes–individual or organizational–that lack any semblance of failure. Perfection is great, but not common.

A few more points:

  • Watch out for “tsk tsk” behavior by those who benefit from the perfection. Righteous indignation is the first and scariest refuge of the fraudster. When you ask someone about their methods, and they give you the “how dare you” act, you have a powerful indication. The Patriots tried this early last week, but the situation quickly got beyond their control.
  • Statistics matter. If someone is “perfect” or winning by a lot and can’t really explain what they are doing so well, take that as a hint. A “perfect” executive likely buries a lot of skeletons. A company with “perfect” financial performance likely carries a lot of fat or a lot of creative accounting. The Patriots’ statistics show how creative they are, we just don’t know how (yet).
  • Observations matter. Ask around. If others indicate ethical grayness exists in the historical record; or they simply won’t talk, you probably have your answer. Closed ranks or a history of crushed complaints provide you the indication you need. The Patriots were branded cheaters years ago, and such a track record will be in the record during this current “scandal.” If you are a board member or executive, all you have to do is ask, but you might have to ask the second order question… There have been no ethical complaints? What if the environment is such that nobody would dare complain? Go to the source at least once or twice at decade.

I have no particular axe to grind when it comes to the New England Patriots. I do, however, think that there are lessons to be learned from the “Deflategate” scandal both in the behaviors of the Patriots franchise and in the peculiar reactions to it by fans and pundits.

The Patriots’ statistical “perfection” is starting to look more and more like a fraud, and while it pales in comparison to famous frauds like Enron, Worldcom, Tyco International, or AIG; it provides some of the same human elements that all these others had in common.

The lesson? Be vigilant, especially when things are too perfect.

8 Things Your Consultants Say About You

The presence of consultants in your organization is a powerful indicator of your strength or weakness as a leader.

It’s basically impossible to move through life without using a consultant. From the haircut you get to the type of shoes you buy to the grand strategy for your organization, chances are you have tapped knowledge outside your own head in order to inject perspective, organize choices and expedite success.

But, in the business world, the presence of consulting talent in an organization provides an interesting barometer on the organization itself.

The “right” consulting model

Transient talent is a useful thing for both efficiency and effectiveness. Even in the most autonomous leadership cultures, adopting temporary talent can be a make or break proposition.

Think about the merchant shipping industry. The captain of a ship is exactly that–the absolute authority at sea.

Yet, captains readily relinquish their authority to harbor pilots every day in every part of the world. The harbor pilot is a consultant of a specific kind: One who has very specific knowledge useful in a very specific circumstance during the life of the ship. The harbor pilot is far more versed in the navigation of his specific harbor than any oceangoing captain could be.

His experience allows for safer navigation of the port regardless of conditions that might not show up on a chart or radar. And, while the captain maintains command of the ship, he or she smartly relinquishes control to the pilot as a matter of course (or, in many places, law).

Thus, the captain brings a pilot aboard to ensure effective navigation with superior knowledge and talent; but not to replace his own command or the need for talented crew members at all times. The pilot boards incoming ships as they approach the port and leaves outgoing ships as they leave.

He’s a consultant.

Such use of transient talent is the “right” model of management consulting: Specific talent applied judiciously and precisely.

But, you and I both know that isn’t always the reason or approach to retaining consultants.  The way consulting talent is engaged–and the objectives for engaging it–says a lot about the executive engaging the consultant.

The interpretation is made by the organization–and that matters.

So…

8 things your consultants say about you without using words…

First, The Good.  To your organization, effective use of outside talent signals some pretty cool things; such as:

  • You are seeking the right knowledge at the right time: Engaging consultants is sometimes an admission that you and your organization can’t possibly know it all. So, you hire consultants who bring sources of knowledge to renew your own.
  • Your recognize that time is of the essence: You know that without augmentation, your existing staff may not have the bandwidth or tools and approaches to managed a rapidly paced project. So, you bring on management talent in a bounded manner to get “over the hump.” There’s no time to waste.
  • You care about developing your organization: You believe that development matters. You recognize that your team and organization can benefit from seeing new ways of doing things. So, you provide outside support to them as a means of developing them along in their careers. They get to see by doing alongside those who have been there and done that.
  • You are good at managing SG&A expense: Just as it would be impractical for every oceangoing captain to learn the intricacies of every possible port he or she will visit, no organization needs to staff against every contingency. Hiring talented consultants during peak times or against peak needs shows that you value great talent, but also solid bottom line performance. You are willing to pay a premium in the moment; but are good at getting lean and mean without having to fire people.

The consultants in your midst may say these things about you; and I hope they do.

However, there’s just as much a chance that consultants represent some brokenness around you…

So.

Here’s the bad, along with a little more narrative on some ways to sniff it out.  

Done inartfully, engaging consultants can telegraph to your organization that:

  • You lack confidence: You lack confidence in your professional capability. You lack vision. The desire for “more study” and slow playing–a result of vacillating indecisiveness–is sometimes an inefficiency that consultants thrive in. Worse yet, your organization may get the sense that you require the ego-stroking presence of high profile consultants in order to make it through your day. Finally, there’s the potential signal that you lack confidence in existing staff. Consultants can feed off of a lack of confidence in very dangerous ways. If the last several consulting engagements you contracted basically confirmed what you already knew, then take a hint.  If your trusted consultant (or any corporate confidant, really) spends more time massaging you than working the problem, you have a further hint that your confidence is being played.
  • You lack action orientation: Bringing in a consulting team to analyze the un-analyzeable in the name of seeking cover with your senior management and board is only sometimes okay. If you are in a position to “bet the company” then taking a deep breath and seeking a second opinion is fine; but you’d better let the organization know you are choosing to over-study the situation; because risk averse navel gazing is contagious. How many times do you hire a specific consultant just because they are the one your boss or the board will listen to? To a degree that’s just good politics, but sometimes it’s politics spelled C.Y.A.
  • Your talent strategy is off: It goes without saying that if you continuously engage outsiders at an arms-length premium to do recurring, especially generalist work; then you are probably missing an opportunity to upgrade your own talent base and save money to boot. When outsiders get all the sweet gigs, your inside talent base gets grumpy. Keep that in mind next time you engage a consultant to do work that could be a stretch for your insiders. Also, watch out for instances where you constantly re-engage “retired” employees you haven’t been able to back-fill. It may be an indicator that your talent strategy is bumbling.
  • You have a bad place to work: This is the bottom of the barrel. You have the Las Vegas of workplaces. People may visit and try to get rich, but nobody really wants to live there because of its false front and seedy underside. How many times do you attempt to hire the consultant but get rebuffed? How many times have outsiders with a good taste of the inside of your organization voluntarily re-upped as a full time employee. Worse yet, how many of your consultants have recommended (non desperate) people to come work for you without collecting a search fee? If the answer to these questions is “few or none,” your consultants may be feeding off of an awful company environment. You might have an organization that is a “nice place to visit, but you wouldn’t want to work there.”

So, there you have it…8 things that consultants may be signaling to your organization.  The good is good. The bad is ugly.

I recommend the good.

A parting thought…

As someone who has scoped, negotiated, and managed many millions of dollars worth of consulting projects and engaged consultants and advisors for millions more, I clearly believe that management consultants can provide exemplary value as hired guns aimed at specific, impact-oriented targets.

It just requires a high professional standard on both sides of the engagement.

It’s important to know what your consultant may be saying about you, if only through the words of the observers in your organization.

Watch out for the bad stuff…

Deflated Footballs and Minor Ethical Lapses

If a lapse of ethics can’t be connected to the outcome, does it matter at all?

There has been an interesting meme accompanying the “deflategate” news about the New England Patriots possibly cheating in the AFC Championship game by using under-inflated (and therefore easier to grip and catch) footballs. The Patriots won the match against the Indianapolis Colts in a rout.

The score was 45-7.

It wasn’t close.

The meme that is emerging on many commentaries on the situation goes something like this:

The Patriots still would have won, so anybody whining about cheating just doesn’t get it.

Translated a different way: An ethical lapse that underlies a big win doesn’t really matter if you can’t draw a direct line to the win.

I won’t pass judgment on the Patriots because the facts of the case are only just now trickling out. I suspect that there will be some grand repercussions if the current reports of 11/12ths of New England’s game balls being artfully deflated are fully confirmed.

However…

The meme deserves some discussion.

Practical Pillars of Ethical Behavior

There are really only a few practical pillars of ethical behavior. Ethical behavior really is simple enough for a child to understand.

In the simplest form, the Golden Rule suffices.

Do to others as you would have them do to you.

A slightly more in-depth examination (and I’m musing with an hour to write this, not attending a philosophy class) brings a few more things to mind:

  • Informed Consent: Ensuring that the players at least know that it’s a game where cheating is possible. In the NFL case: The Colts knew cheating was possible and complained about a similar issue in November after losing to the Patriots 42-20.
  • Rule of Rules: When there is a social contract, a policy, a rule, or a law, it gets followed or changed. Enforcements and rule changes don’t happen ex post. The NFL rules are quite precise as to what compliant football inflation is.
  • Duty of Care: Leaders have a duty to uphold the same ethical and fiduciary standards that their leaders have. Senior leaders and boards rely on subordinates to uphold standards, not to secretly break them when it’s advantageous. The head coach and others will receive stiff fines and likely suspensions if violations are proven…Not just the ballboy and equipment manager.
  • Avoidance of Ignorance: The appearance of impropriety should be a motivation to know more, not less. Ignorance is not ethical bliss.Unfortunately, we already see some high profile Patriots glossing over the seriousness of the allegations. New England QB Tom Brady calls this burgeoning scandal the least of his worries and TE Rob Gronkowski made light of it with a joking tweet.

Note that I don’t bring “fairness” and “equality” into the mix of ethics. Power and comparative advantage are real things.

Live with it.

When to apply or not apply the pillars

With those things in mind, when is a minor or remote lapse of humane ethics ok? When does personal advantage trump the ethical duties outlined above?

Is it when the ethical slip is so small or far removed from the win that nobody can possibly link it to the win itself?

Is it when the actions are in secret? If contracts prevent others from talking about the ethical cracks that exist? If the people who know the truth are powerless or discredited?

When is it?

I’d argue that it’s worth examining one’s approach to life, profession, and leadership with these lenses; and working not only to be in alignment when them, but also in league with others whose ethics are similarly aligned.

Doing this examination, even (and especially) when in the midst of a big win is the mark of a humane leader.

But, why? Why not just take the win and shut up?

Why is it important to examine one’s self even when winning big?

The first reason is this: When ethical lapses are buried under big wins as “irrelevant,” they create cracks. Over time those cracks become holes you can drive a truck through. Those holes destroy lives, reputations, families, and organizations.

The Global Financial Crisis was allowed to reach its catastrophic crescendo because a profound number of “minor” ethical lapses in underwriting, ratings, and personal financial standards were ignored in the fantastical run-up to the crisis.

Thousands of people knew that the lapses present would result in a crash. Greed being what it is for all of us, it was too costly to examine the realities and step off the machine.

The second reason is this: When suspected ethical lapses are ignored due to organizational distance, plausible deniability, or other comfortable but specious buffers, they form the same cracks as knowingly buried lapses.

A fantastic example of this is evident in the Bernard Madoff Ponzi Scheme. No, not because of the deplorable Ponzi scheme itself. The learning comes from the the legions of people investing with Madoff. Many of them suspected that Madoff was doing something illegal or unethical. Some of those were warned outright by the likes of Harry Markopolos. However, they were far too comfortable with their clockwork-like 12 – 16% annual “investment” returns.

In the Madoff case, a cynic would say that the people benefiting from the scheme while it was running knew they were dealing with a crook. But, he was “their” crook. He was making “returns” for them that others couldn’t access.

A slightly more generous take would be that while people suspected wrongdoing, they had no evidence of it, and so all was well.

Some might say that there is no such thing as a minor ethical lapse. I disagree. I think there are minor ethical lapses all the time–many of them unconscious or inadvertent.

Absolute standards are hard to find in the world.

The disaster comes when the minor lapses are allowed to survive, replicate, and grow.

Back to the Beginning

I’ve probably whipsawed between two very different standards of ethical care in this quick article: Deflated footballs to trillion dollar systemic disasters.

The key point of this article is that if a dominant meme can emerge in a day or two that excuses an alleged break of a fundamental rule because “the Patriots would have won anyway;” then it’s worth stopping and examining whether that kind of thinking is pervasive in our own professional lives.

I’m not sure it’s possible to treat all people with every possible connection to us with the same, conscious approach to humane ethics. There’s always the next cause, care, or critique that will arise.

But, as Socrates said: The unexamined life is not worth living.

The End of Honesty?

I came across this article by Victor Davis Hanson on the prevalence of lying to advance agendas of all sorts.

Link

I admit, it struck me as a very timely if somewhat political angle on a problem that is significant in our society.  Namely, the tendency of some leaders (and VDH is decidedly focused on the political realm, but this absolutely extends into the business and community realms) to lie with impunity when doing so aids their position.

Hanson coins the term “Painless Mendacity.”

It is brilliant.

He states that some among us believe that there is no downside to lying as long as it advances one’s agenda.

My belief on lying is very much like Bear Bryant’s view of quitting:  The first time you do it, it’s hard.  The second time, it gets easier.  The third time?  You don’t even think about it.

Upholding a standard of honesty and integrity is hard; especially when you have tacit permission to lie.

But then again, nobody said it would be easy.

Your turn.  Are we at the end of honesty? 

What’s Your White Whale?

The types of goals we set, and the manner in which we pursue them, have consequences for us and for the people around us.

“…to the last I grapple with thee; from hell’s heart I stab at thee; for hate’s sake I spit my last breath at thee…”

– Captain Ahab, in Moby Dick by Herman Melville

And like that, a captain lost his life, a ship, and all men aboard save one left to tell the tale.

Call him Ishmael.

Focus, intensity, and drive are all fantastic things. Identifying a goal and driving toward it can differentiate a professional in the earliest stages of their career. Such drive and focus is valuable for teams, organizations, and yes, families.

But it is in how we define our goals that we establish our course and set sail.

Sometimes…sometimes we choose goals that–when played out–are destructive to us and to those around us. They are outwardly worthy, and inwardly virulent.

The more senior we are, the more influence we have, the more damage we can do.

Ahab did this when he let a blinding, to-the-marrow hatred of a monstrous white whale cause him to lead his men to the edge of the earth and ultimately to death. He took his ship off its profitable whaling mission to pursue an obsession, a blood vendetta against a big mammal that took his leg.

Of course, you or I would never do that, right? Ahab is fiction.

Well, not really.

The way we define our goals–or help execute the goals others define for us–defines us; and the more driven we are in achieving misguided goals, the more destructive we can be. We might not kill our crew, but we could very well kill an organization, a partnership, or a marriage.

Take a moment and think: Do you harbor a goal like Ahab’s lust for killing the white whale?

Worse yet, have you, as a board member, senior executive, or manager, provided people with incentives to pursue a white whale goal?

A white whale goal is one of two things: In its first and simplest guise it’s an obsession. It is a goal that is so deeply held and so exclusively pursued that its pursuit alone is destructive to relationships, damaging to professionalism, and ultimately distracting from real performance. A foolish, simpleminded pursuit of money, power, position, prestige, image, “winning,” or–wait for it–the moral or intellectual high ground are all examples.

Yes, that last one is a doozy that we too often forget or forgive. Self-righteousness blows up as many relationships as most any other thing listed.

In its second guise, a white whale goal can be a misguided goal propagated by proxy, where boards and senior leaders provide a framework of thinking (for example “grow profits”) without guidance on and transparency in boundaries, value, or values; or with specious accounting and accountability.

This second version of the white whale can lead both to brutal decisions by middle managers “just doing their jobs” and to baffling decisions in the ranks where people struggle for clarity. All the while the board and senior managers maintain the real innocence of propagating “good” goals. Or, at least, they maintain plausible deniability.

The epitome of these two types of white whales playing out–an obsession that leads to a vicious goal by proxy–is the assassination of St. Thomas Beckett of Canterbury.

King Henry II, obsessed with the church as an interference, is reported to have said “will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?”

After which, of course, somebody did; to the ignorance of the historical significance of the act.

But, the King didn’t order the martyrdom of a future saint…Did he?

You as a senior executive didn’t really order the curtailing of investment in pursuit of current earnings…Did you?

You didn’t handicap the sales team by introducing turgid administrative tasks in the name of greater openness and transparency…Did you?

You didn’t order leaders to take unacceptable safety and fire risk by curtailing costly planned outages and maintenance…Did you?

Surely, there are honest-to-goodness unintended consequences; and then there are white whales.  Sometimes they are hard to tell apart. Foolish or obsessive pursuit and propagation is the sin qua non of the white whale.

Remember Enron?

Consider the Enron scandal. The tragedy of Enron was equal parts a criminal lack of professionalism (which has been well publicized and rises to the level of obsession for some people involved) and a broad based propagation of and adherence to financial frameworks and incentives that many people in the ranks knew made no sense–misguided goals.

This second part gets missed and dismissed, especially as the Enron case recedes into memory as a quaint blip preceding the global financial crisis of 2007-’08.

The second aspect–the misguided goal set–is actually the most important aspect of the Enron case for professionals to consider these days.

A good example of the incentive issue was where “mark to market” thinking led leaders to be paid handsomely on the modeled Net Present Value of development projects, but not on the actual fulfillment of the projects themselves. Baffling? Yes. Still, senior management–operating within a framework endorsed by auditors, consultants, and board members–defined the goals. Those goals played a big part in destroying the company.

Sure, a few Enron employees went to jail and many professionals were sullied forever; but the true “crime” that gets missed is how top down incentives drove otherwise professional people toward behaviors that they wouldn’t have even paid themselves for.  They were white whale goals acted on by proxy.

That is perhaps the best test of a white whale by proxy. Would you pay yourself to fulfill the incentive set you have?

White whale goals by proxy are usually present when you hear people lament that they are “just doing their job,” or “doing what they are told,” or “doing what they get paid to do,” or in the worst of the worst cases “protecting the company.”

Massive autocracies and ignominious genocides stand on the shoulders of white whale goals by proxy, particularly when they are proxy to an obsessed leader. Let’s not participate in or propagate them.

What do some simpler ones look like?

To keep this closer to home, here are a few modern goals that can become white whales in our professional lives, and a brief explanation of why:

1. A superlative image and “personal brand” – The phony focus on image in the mold of “fake it ’til you make it.” If pursued as an end in itself, vs. an outcome of a life of substance, then…well, it’s a deleterious focus on a goal that is ultimately not merely self interested, but selfish in a harmful sense.

2. Great pains for small wins – The dominance of the clean desk, starched shirts, pursuit of dominance on every point in the negotiation. Basically, this is idealizing stuff that doesn’t matter. In WWII U.S. Army slang, foolish adherence to critical standards on things that didn’t matter to the mission was known as chickenshit. I’m not sure what it is called now, but whatever it is it’s damaging to the mission and morale.

3. Rent-seeking – Seeking wealth without the creation of wealth. Placing defense of title, position, and income ahead of principle and value. Jerry Pournelle’s Iron Law of Bureaucracy puts in pithy words this white whale; and provides an explanation for countless managers’ sometimes oddball behaviors: They defend the bureaucracy at the expense of the mission. It’s a classic white whale. Similarly, acting purely on incentives without regard to the value they create (or destroy) can be a white whale goal as outlined in the Enron case. This is often the case when incentives are based on individual drivers (like revenue growth or headcount or output) in isolation that systemically create no value.

4. Temporal goal misalignment – Addressing the “now” without a focus on the “later” or vice versa. How often do we see short term decisions made that have a readily measurable, net negative long term impact; but that are characterized and lauded as magnificent wins. So, you closed the deal and got paid. Was it a good deal for shareholders and employees–the people who live with the longer term decisions? Interestingly, the opposite is the case as well: Many bankrupt companies lie foundered on the rocks of “long term investment.” How often do we see 5-year plans that lack a 1 or 2-year plan component?  The white whale lies in the lack of explicit balance.

5. Vengeance – I’m just going to go ahead and list it because, well, I started with Captain Ahab; and this was his issue. Pursuing personal vendettas, particularly those that drag your organization, family, or friends along with you; is the ultimate in white whale thinking. 9 times out of 10, the bitter pursuit of revenge against other people or other organizations only serves to take your eye off the ball. To be clear, this doesn’t mean simply the pursuit of crushing vengeance a la Ahab. It can also be as simple as an overweening need for one-upmanship or the constant need to be seen as ahead of the object of your bitterness. All this is wasted motion when it comes to life and performance.

So what?

Knowing whether you are pursuing a white whale is tough. Generally, the white whale looks like a worthy goal to the person obsessed with it.People who are genuinely obsessed can’t generally be reasoned with. But, they can be removed from their position…and, that’s worth pondering.

The best way to spot a white whale is to lay out the “True North” that everyone agrees to–what winning really looks like from a fiduciary, professional, and values standpoint; and then to identify how far off that azimuth your immediate goals are.

White whales pop out easily at that point as twisted and torqued visions of winning. They link to True North via paragraphs of logical backflips instead of a sentence fragment of concise clarity.

Like any other blind spot, these goals require reflection on your own part to spot. They also require willingness to tolerate a person or two in your midst who will challenge your view, your goals, your passions, and your obsessions. That person might be a trusted friend, a mentor, a pastor, or–if you are lucky–a spouse. In a really functional team, it can also be a subordinate or a peer.

In any event, you have to listen to them.

The gist of Melville’s story about Ahab and his hatred of the whale was that Ahab destroyed everything and everyone around him in pursuit of a definitively odd goal: Revenge against the single whale that took his leg.

There were many other whales in the ocean.

But, the white whale did him and his crew in. No–strike that–Ahab’s obsession with a white whale goal did it.

Don’t let a white whale–yours or somebody else’s–do you in.

What are some examples of white whales from your own professional, political, or personal lives?

Activist Investors and How to Handle Them

Activist investors may become more active–spurring management to focus and accelerate.

 

Fortune’s Paul Hodgson filed this article yesterday about how activist investors are becoming even more active.

It’s a good read that summarizes the influence of activist hedge funds and the like; and how that influence is growing into the Fortune 500-sized company space.

Hodgson’s point of view is that we should look for more activism because, well, it works.  Success breeds success.

His defining quote is at the end of the article:

Boards are crumbling in front of the [activists] because the value released by changes they are forcing through is making it more likely that other shareholders will support them.

It really is that simple. If an activist like Carl Icahn can campaign for eBay to sell PayPal, and subsequently “unlock” trapped value, then so be it.

Recently, there has been a spate of debate and discussion about how activists can create incentive misalignment.  In a letter to the editor of the Wall Street Journal yesterday, reader Jonathan Kaufelt laments the lack of incentive alignment in the Dow Chemical Board of Directors case.  You may recall that there has been an ongoing discussion of whether activist investor Daniel Loeb’s scheme to pay his director nominees for near term stock appreciation is conducive to good governance.

A reasonable person could say that such incentive structures are problematic more for their mis-allocation (not all directors hold the incentives) than for their mis-alignment. There might be a temporal conflict with fiduciary duty, but it’s not clear that the conflict is one that other shareholders would mind (which would be the point of Hodgson’s Fortune article).

In other words, the activists may be amplifying existing incentives to boost near term stock performance; but might not be an issue to those who own the company.  This gets into a more existential view of value creation and “long term” investing where the question is whether a shareholder’s objective ought to be to maximize value of holdings today (the “activist” vision) or to create an investment vehicle for all time (the “investor” vision).

On those things, reasonable people can disagree.  In the case of a public company, it’s reasonable to say that all shareholders ought to be ready to vote with their feet–or sell orders as the case may be.

Another view–my view–is that activists, by stirring the pot, actually serve a purpose that should normally be served by right functioning boards in the first place:  They sharpen management’s focus on value creation vs. sleepy backslapping boondoggles.

For CEOs and boards, the best prevention program for the pains of activism is–wait for it–to act like an activist.  Ironically, activists often create the pressure of scrutiny where it should have already been.

I welcome your thoughts…

Concussions, Settlements, Cynicism, and Standards

The NFL’s concussion settlement might be more cynical than its decades-long deceptions on the topic.

While I have nothing to gain from the National Football League’s concussion settlement, I have been an interested observer. As I stated in an earlier commentary, I played the sport and understand its intensity. So, I take notice of big moves related to the concussion issue.

In a recent article in ESPN The Magazine, Peter Keating outlined how difficult it would be for a retired NFL player to be compensated under the NFL’s new concussion settlement the league is putting in place.

Just to put things in perspective, Keating writes the following:

First, to be eligible for compensation at any point, you must register with the settlement within 180 days of its final version’s being posted on its web site. Then, if you’re feeling symptoms, you must see a doctor approved by the settlement plan’s claims administrator. These basic hurdles, combined with athletes’ lack of awareness, will be enough to knock nearly 40 percent of potentially eligible players and families out of the deal, according to estimates by the NFL’s actuaries. That gets you from about 20,500 potentially eligible players to around 12,500, according to both sides.

Next, you will need to submit to a battery of 32 neurocognitive tests. Invented by the NFL, the players’ lawyers and their consultants, this scheme is new, untested and at points bizarre — one part is a 338-question exam about your psychological state and personality whose results won’t even be used to decide if you get compensation. Stern estimates that the whole thing will probably take you around five hours to complete, and if you give up or can’t finish — and remember, you are already feeling subpar; that’s why you’re getting yourself checked out — you are out of luck.

If you do get to the end of the assessment, you will need extraordinarily poor grades to qualify as neurocognitively impaired under the settlement. For eligibility, the deal requires players to score at least 1.7 standard deviations below expectations on multiple cognitive areas, including learning and memory and executive function. That’s worse than doctors often see in patients who already have moderate-stage dementia. “Most guys don’t realize how badly off you need to be,” says Stern. “You have to be really, really bad, basically unable to take care of yourself during the day.”

That’s not a settlement, it’s an insurance policy against payouts.

Basically, retired players are presented with a catch-22. In order to collect on the compensation offered, they have to be too impaired to complete the tests that are required in order to justify eligibility to collect.

Sometimes, cynicism is on display for all to see.

In this case, the NFL might have gone too far.

I write this because it involves a critical view of professional standards and their impact on the long term strategy of any organization. We all have to choose where we draw the line on supporting stakeholders of our brands, our organizations, and our communities. Some choices are more transparently cynical than others.

Kneecapping the retired performers its business depended on might not be the highest and healthiest long term play for the NFL.

What do you think?

 

 

When Enough is Enough…

Know how to really know when to say when.

Last week, I posted (here) about grace as an under-appreciated leadership trait. Given the very positive response to the topic both online and off, I thought it timely to discuss the other side of grace.

I’ll refer to the other side of grace as judgment because it is a term that is applicable across disciplines and into the professional realm. Some might say that the opposite of grace is justice. I won’t quibble with that interpretation; but justice implies an abundance of objective truth, and judgment implies an abundance of ambiguity.

The business environment offers far more ambiguity than truth.

So…Judgment.

Get your thinking cap ready for this one. It’s bit of a climb, but there’s quite a view.

First, an anecdote.

Recently, pundits and fans expended a tremendous amount of energy on the NFL’s Ray Rice domestic abuse incident, and rightfully so. While there is plenty of nuance to the discussion, one thing became clear: Once video of a grown man striking his soon-to-be wife with enough force to knock her unconscious became public, it was enough.

He was fired and roundly vilified.

The NFL’s Neanderthal and perhaps cynical decision processes aside, the case of Rice’s dismissal is a study in decision making.

To wit: Plenty of people can logically argue that grace in this instance might be merited. Mr. Rice has been an upstanding citizen and model representative of his NFL club (until he beat his significant other…that is). In fact one need not look too far to find plenty of people blaming the victim and justifying Rice’s actions as forgivable if not acceptable.

Others, particularly those in higher profile positions in the professional community, know the score. They know that one highly deviant data point is all it takes. When a person breaks a social contract in such an egregious manner, the evidence is sufficient to pass judgment.

The application of evidence, from the mundane to the shocking to the stealthy, to judgment and decision making is what this post is about.

When is enough…enough?

We deal with ambiguity in all sorts of situations. How do we know when to go full speed ahead with a plan, when to cut ties with a boss or business partner, or when to at least alter approaches with others based on the evidence we see?

Most of us want to give people and plans the benefit of the doubt… Some of us do it to such an extreme that we lead ourselves into professional peril or, worse, purgatory. Grace for grace’s sake. The benefit of the doubt as a rule vs. an option.

When do we know enough to make a decision?

The answer? When we see one or two powerful indicators, or many, many subtle ones. The art is in knowing the indicators and their strength and in avoiding errors of intuition around them.

I’ll explain that in a moment.

Probabilistic thinking, when applied to situations at home and work, can allow you both to give the benefit of the doubt AND to maintain a meaningful level of decisiveness in the face of ambiguity. The concepts in this post are just as applicable to human relationships (both personal and professional) as they are to strategic plans.

Let’s dive in.

The Foundation:

Depending on your disposition, you would have either been fascinated or bored to tears if I went into detail on the foundational subject matter for this post (in short: Bayesian Inference); but others have done it better than I can. So, I won’t. I will give a short overview instead.

The basis for the rest of this article is a formula for probabilistic thinking known as Bayes’ Rule and a method using it known as Bayesian Inference. I’ll work with a slightly bastard interpretation of both. For those of you who know better, bear with me to the end.

Bayes’ Rule was formulated by a man named Thomas Bayes…a thinker ahead of his time (and behind his own thinking, some would say–he never published his work). If you have no idea what Bayes’ Rule is, you might study it elsewhere (links to good, popular/accessible summaries are out there. Here is one).

Bayes’ Rule is a formula for evaluating the impact of evidence. It is the foundation for Bayesian Inference, which is a process that provides a quantitative method for combining new evidence with prior beliefs–for “objectifying the subjective.” It is, at its most simple, a formula for taking:

  1. A “prior” hypothesized probability that something is true or false–“I’m 80% sure Johnny has ADD.”
  2. An observation that provides evidence (the “test” –> “Johnny sat for 30 minutes reading a book.”)
  3. And a set of 2 conditional probabilities based on the prior assumption and the observation (1. “If Johnny has ADD, there’s a 5% chance of Johnny sitting still that long.” and 2. “If Johnny has no ADD, there’s a 60% chance of Johnny sitting still that long.”)

These things come together to create a “posterior” probability that the hypothesis is true. The formula looks like this:

The term “P(A|B)” is the posterior probability that A should be true given that B was observed. Enough said, right? To make it simpler for the practical uses I’ll put together later, the calculator I’ll use (here’s an online version) looks like this:

Based on the posterior probability that Johnny has ADD based on this test (the green box, which is now 25%, down from the prior of 80%), Johnny’s parents can rest a bit easier.

If you are still with me, you are wondering “So friggin what?” Right. Well, this little primer is necessary because the power of Bayes’ Rule in your everyday life is real. It’s a way of updating your thoughts on a strategy, a relationship, a bet you want to make in Vegas, and any number of other things, by just applying evidence and judgment. And it doesn’t require you to sample forever in order to increase or decrease your conviction.

More importantly, it’s a way of battling a sympathetic and highly anchored intuition. Almost all of us have it. For example: I’d bet you dollars to donuts that Johnny’s parents, when asked what their “posterior” should be after the observation above, might update from 80 percent to “oh, ah, about 60 percent.” The reality was a fraction of that (25%).

Your intuition isn’t great when it comes to judging the meaning of highly deviant events or behaviors, and that can cost you. It can cause you to write people off based on a bad streak when it isn’t warranted, or it can cause you to be far, far too forgiving to someone or something (like a plan) that looks nice but isn’t performing.

Thus…Bayesian Inference.

Constant updating with new information can make you a better professional (and poker player), and frankly allow you to live a better life.

But…How?

Let’s apply it to a situation like the NFL’s with Ray Rice.

Case 1: Ray Rice and Firing Decisions

Take the Ray Rice example. Imagine you have a high profile employee in your organization who does as Ray Rice did. There are really two considerations that come into play in a case like this. Call them Reputation and Values.

  • Reputation: Given the evidence available, prior experience, and the profile of the person, what is the likelihood your organization can weather the reputation storm?
  • Values: Given the evidence available, what is the likelihood the individual’s actions could be reconciled to your organization’s values?

The NFL, at first, applied the reputation question to its calculus; and it looked something like this:

Round 1: Evidence available was an ugly video of Rice dragging his fiance out of an elevator car. Ugly, yes, but who knows what happened in there. Right? The NFL has weathered many, many of these similar storms in the past without indefinitely suspending a player, so experience was on Rice’s side. The NFL took the intuitive view that Rice wouldn’t hurt its reputation because his actions were on a continuum of behavior. Bygones and all that. 2 game suspension.

Then? Video of the actual incident leaks. Woah. A firestorm. What happened?

Round 2: Well, let’s consider the values case, which is what the NFL was ultimately forced to do after video of Rice actually cold-cocking his soon-to-be-wife comes out. It results in more of a binary conclusion. Here’s a simple calculation based on the hypothesis that “Ray Rice is aligned with the values we espouse.”

See what happened there? A guy punches his fiance, and suddenly there’s no way he can represent the values that some people expect the NFL to protect (simple things, like “don’t beat up your girlfriend”). Rice goes from “model citizen” to “persona non grata;” from a 2 game suspension to fired with indefinite league suspension. It’s not a continuum, it’s a cliff.

Keep that in mind: Powerful evidence deserves a powerful response–a cliff, not a slope.

A case of an employee filmed publicly beating his significant other is probably too egregious and easy for most leaders to judge. It’s pretty much binary. Still, cases of legal or moral misconduct and how we handle them hold the mirror up to us in ways that few other cases do. The outward appearance of when enough is enough for you as a leader or follower reflects on your morals more than you’ll ever know.

What’s the equivalence point between grace and judgment when it comes to an employee’s misconduct? You have to make that call, and I’m offering one set of tools. Even the most “pure as driven snow” of ethical leaders probably has an expense or two that could be called into question even if just via poor recollection (let’s see, was that 15 miles to the airport or 18…?). In the case of small deviations, it takes a lot of them. In the case of big ones? not so much.

Let’s move the cases a little closer to issues you probably face in your workplace.

This is where these approaches get juicier.

Case 2: The Change Leader Who Doesn’t

People are keen observers of behavior. When a leader declares a change, and doesn’t change behavior, people know it; even when the leader INTENDS to change. Intentions don’t matter. Observations do.

Let’s say a leader declares a tremendous new initiative for his organization that is going to require all parties to think and act differently. Problem is, his behavior reveals no real substantive indication that anything has changed.

Some people will say “yes, sir” and attempt to implement change.

Others? They will assess the conditional likelihood of change given their observation of the leader. They won’t necessarily use math, but if they did… Applying Bayes’ Rule, it goes something like this:

Situation: I’ve been told by my leader that things are changing.

Prior Probability of Real Change: Let’s say the organization has been quite good at implementing change, so 60%.

Observation of the Leader: Once he announced the change, my leader does nothing to reinforce or role model the change (probability of observing this given real change? Let’s say its 10%. Probability of observing this given no real change is actually going to happen? Let’s just say it’s 90%).

The calculator looks like this:

 

See how easy that was? We go from an announced change effort that had an estimated 60% chance of success to a quick, mathematical assessment that change is only about 14% likely to happen given the leader’s lack of change.

In short? Why bother changing? Nobody else is. This from a single assessment of the actions of the announcing leader.

By the way, this gets worse the more case history there is. The more “flavors of the month” get launched and abandoned, the more fatigued and rational people become about change. “Going through the motions” and “why bother” mindsets are real things.

Case in point: If I had started with a 20% likelihood of real change as my prior estimate, the calculator outputs 2% as the posterior probability.

Yeah, that’s right, if you are bad at implementing change, people may qualitatively stop believing you; but the reality is that their cynicism is justifiable with numbers.

Such assessments show why role modeling by leaders is so critically important in transformational change environments. While people in the rank and file won’t typically do the math; they will, in most circumstances, read the clues. The math just reinforces it.

If anything, in my experience leading change, I’ve observed that people get on or off the bandwagon quickly based on their assessment of commitment and consistency of senior executives in charge of the change in a fashion very similar to that presented here.

Let’s look at another case you might find familiar.

Case 3: The Stretch Role

The age-old question of when a person is ready for a promotion can be tackled with a Bayesian approach in order to avoid “has-to-have-been-there-itis” where nobody is good enough for promotion to a role they’ve never held before.

Let’s say you have a budding manager who wants to step into a more senior role. What do you need to see from her in order to gain confidence in placing her in a stretch role? Pick a few triggers and use them as tests.

Maybe the triggers for her to be considered ready for the stretch role are (keeping it bland and general) organization, acumen, and foresight; but all people have some doses of each of them without being ready. So, how do you handle it?

This is where the compounding or iterative approach to Bayesian Inference matters. The “Posterior” of your first test becomes the “Prior” of your next. The analogy here is a poker player updating his assessment of his probability of winning as each card is played.

Let’s say your “prior” probability is 60% that your charge will be ready for the stretch role, but that you really need to get to 80% to pull the trigger. What do you do? You keep track of how she does on the “trigger” criteria.

So, you use the calculator in an iterative way this time…

Reading from left to right, you can see that you’d be justified in placing the person in a stretch role (85% confidence) after observing the confluence of 3 observations on the triggers. The addition of evidence for organization, acumen, and foresight support the decision. This is overly simplified, of course.

There could, in turn, be a column here for evidence that is contravening, and it would be factored in. That’s right: The iterative power of this mode of thinking is real; and it works in both directions.

Let’s have some fun with one that demonstrates the bi-directional nature of Bayesian Inference along with the asymmetric power of different types of observations.

This time I’ll use an unpleasant but all too common situation.

Case 4: The Asshole*

Let’s say you establish a “No Asshole” rule in your life. Perhaps this means that you will do you best to either remove them from your team or, failing that, remove yourself from contact with them.

Some assholes are easy to identify (in a Lloyd Christmas kind of way, they’re obvious). But sometimes, especially in a professional setting, you have to figure out when enough is enough through evidence and observation. The issue is this: Assholes can act like good people at times–sometimes even better than good people. They can be charming, or attractive, or smart and polished. But, deviant behaviors stand out.

I’ll demonstrate.

Imagine a new colleague comes into your organization. Let’s say that your No Asshole radar is completely inactive. They might be an asshole, but you see no reason to think so. You assign a 10% chance of asshole-dom at the start (perhaps the base likelihood of encountering one of these animals in your professional experience). Then, over the course of six months, you observe the person being actively deceptive, politically pitting people against each other, backbiting, and bullying.

Taken individually, these actions could come from anyone. Even a great executive could backbite once in a while. For that, I’ve used 10% to 20% as the probability of a “bad day for a good person” in the “Behavior|Not an Asshole” line below. But, as observations mount…it becomes clear:

The person is an asshole. 100%.

Get away.

But wait, you say? They are nice, have a warm smile, have charisma, are active in the community, and are great with their family.

That’s the issue, so are people who aren’t assholes.These aren’t deviant behaviors like the first set of observations, so they really don’t count for much. It’s the old “I’m just an intense person sometimes” or “my job requires it” shibboleths that assholes like to trot out. The person is already over the cliff. Statistically speaking, adding in nice but common behaviors has no power in the assessment.

All the goodness in the world can’t overcome a multitude of highly deviant behaviors that tag your colleague as an asshole. Find a way to get away and preserve yourself and your organization.

Here’s why this matters: Outlying behaviors are huge signals, and should be taken as such. In-lying behaviors (like smiling and acting nice, for instance) are actually not all that big a signal. Even the biggest assholes in the world smile and act nice frequently, just like “normal” people. It’s simply a posture–like crossing and uncrossing one’s arms. Observers of actions know that it’s much harder to hide deviant behaviors over the long run.

This is why true acts of deception and bullying, especially within a purported culture of integrity, should sound the alarms…now…loudly. Enough is enough.

So What?

It all comes down to this: When considering evidence in order to make a judgment or decision, a series of small signals can add up to a lot of conviction, but it takes a lot of time. A single, clear, outlying signal can remove any doubt, even in the presence of small signals to the contrary. When it comes to judging people’s actions (like in Case 4), it’s a cliff that can’t be walked back up.

After the presentation and consideration of some types of evidence, no amount of earthly grace is indicated.

Here are 5 practical ways to apply this kind of thinking everyday:

  • Have a point of view going into any interaction, particularly those with significant ambiguity. Be vigilant. And, update your point of view as you judge events and actions, to the good and to the bad. Your “posterior” estimate of reality is what matters.
  • Place checkpoints on strategic plans that call for evidence based tests of whether the world is what you thought it would be. Update!
  • Hold performance reviews with people that allow you to mutually update your understanding of how things are going and ideally to steer away from misunderstandings of performance or inference. Get intentions out on the table to match with actions.
  • Remember that your actions are what people see, not your intent. The best thing about using Bayes’ Rule is that it relies on observation and evidence. The worst thing about it? When others use it. You can’t weasel your way out of being an asshole once people are onto you and get over their tendency to let you slide.
  • Tolerate, but only to a certain degree, bad behavior. That goes for bad behavior from your superiors or from your subordinates. Everybody has a bad day. A bad day is not an indicator of a bad person. A single data point can’t indicate a trend, but it can indicate a probability of the underlying personality, which has been the point of this post.

A friend recently related to me an adage from his years in the U.S. Army: “Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, three times is enemy action.” Such is the type of thinking I’m encouraging here, with the slight adjustment that sometimes, once is enough.

Grace is a critical element of leadership, except when it’s time to use judgment. Using the concepts in this post can allow you to know when enough is enough.

Now, go mind your posterior.

* I would like to thank Stanford University professor Bob Sutton for popularizing the notion that the word “asshole” has no polite substitute. I am using it here as professor Sutton would. If you have not read it, Sutton’s book The No Asshole Ruleis worth a look.

Geoff Wilson hopes that this overlong and somewhat technical article did, in fact, provide a view that was worth the climb. Offer your comments or critiques below or offline.