The more urgently leaders seek crystal balls, the cloudier the prospects become
Wicked: that’s how some people describe today’s complex problems. University of Pittsburgh Professor John Camillus has noted five criteria for determining whether a problem is wicked: it involves many stakeholders with conflicting priorities; its roots are tangled; it changes with every attempt to address it; you’ve never faced it before; and there is no way to evaluate whether a remedy will work. In short, a wicked problem has innumerable causes and cannot be definitely resolved. Sound familiar?
The more urgently leaders seek crystal balls, the cloudier the prospects become. At least that’s how it seems to many senior executives who peer through the mists of uncertainty and paradox to see what might happen next. The harder they stare, the more the mist shifts. Will oil prices go up or down? Will credit remain tight or loose? Will discretionary consumer spending increase, stay flat or decrease? Is selling branded products or generics the answer for developing markets?
Trying to figure out which emerging trend is significant and which will fade is not only frustrating -- leaders who bet wrong pay a significant price. Think of used-car lots filled with SUVs; piles of CDs sold at garage sales; brand-new housing developments in the exurbs. Uncertainty about a fast-changing, ever-expanding landscape has created a haze that is unlikely to lift any time soon.
Trying to predict the future with any precision is a fool’s game, but ignoring it is even worse. The right approach lies somewhere between prediction and neglect. Research has revealed a positive correlation between a leader’s tolerance for ambiguity and the successful management of paradoxes: Troy University Professor Debra Hunter says that a high tolerance for ambiguity entails a tendency to perceive ambiguous situations as desirable, whereas most people have a low tolerance see ambiguous situations as threatening. Clearly, tolerance for ambiguity can help a leader cope with an increasingly uncertain world. But how do you develop that tolerance? In our work we have uncovered three types of leadership: head only, heart only and gut only, and each faces particular challenges with regards to embracing ambiguity.
Dealing with ambiguity is unfamiliar territory for ‘head-only’ leaders who have always relied on analytical tools to predict where markets and technologies are going and who see their responsibility as ‘creating order out of chaos’. Quick resolution of uncertain, ambiguous situations has always been their objective: that’s why it is called problem solving and, sometimes, ‘decisive leadership’. Unfortunately for head-only leaders, the world of senior leadership today more frequently calls for balancing paradoxes than for solving problems.
Uncertainty and ambiguity are also challenging for ‘heart-only’ leaders, who chart their course by listening and being open to a wide range of opinions. They become confused and even paralyzed by their desire to be responsive to everyone. ‘Guts-only’ leaders are probably the most tolerant of ambiguity and uncertainty, but their weakness is that they place too much faith in their instincts—which may be exactly wrong in a rapidly shifting environment.
We have worked with many scientists, engineers and accountants who, by training, are able to absorb, digest and analyze large amounts of information. Their challenge lies in making the leap from information to implication. Similarly, head-only leaders will struggle with implications because wild swings in social, economic and technological trends undermine logical, fact-based forecasts; guts-only leaders will miss the boat because their instincts don’t function as well in an era when all the rules have changed and experience (which sharpens instinct) has become less relevant as a predictive tool; and heart-only leaders will have difficulty identifying future trends because they’re drowning in a sea of opinions and feelings—the more they listen, the more open they are to fresh perspectives and the more confused they become.
We’re not dismissing the strengths of each type of leader. What we are suggesting is that in an uncertain, interdependent world, leaders need to avail themselves of all three capabilities – head, heart and gut -- if they are to avoid the obvious pitfall of overdoing their strengths.
Being a CEO today is akin to playing roulette, but with only enough resources to place a bet on one spin of the wheel. Years ago, you could place multiple bets on multiple spins. Plus, the game was often rigged: you had enough information to know what numbers were likely to come up. Now, not only is everything riding on a single spin but the consequences of making the wrong bet can be catastrophic. For example, betting on the capacity of next-generation technology or consumer response to a product are big choices with huge consequences. You might have to fire 25 per cent of your organization or, worse, mortgage your company’s long-term viability. Just observe the pharmaceutical, financial services, automobile and newspaper industries.
These types of wrenching decisions are hardly limited to CEOs. Middle and senior managers are increasingly facing significant choices that can affect a lot of people in large interdependent systems. Problems really crop up after you make your bet. As with many senior leaders, your training and instinct tell you to look outward, determine what is likely to happen, and create a strategy designed to take advantage of or protect you from your ‘prediction’. The problem? On one hand, you have been taught that leaders stay the course—they make a decision and stick with it. On the other, high degrees of uncertainty require course shifts; adaptability is the name of the game. This is the paradox of commitment—of balancing conflicting priorities.
So what choice do you make? Do you change course and open yourself up to criticism that you’re a ‘waffler’? People often react negatively when a leader admits error and reverses field. More than one U.S. political leader has admitted making a mistake by supporting the Iraq war, saying that now, with fresh information, he is against it. While this seems an admirable quality—the ability to admit you’re wrong and adapt as circumstances dictate—many perceive it as the sign of disingenuous or weak leadership.
Yet staying the course comes with its own negative repercussions. How long should you stick with a strategy as evidence piles up that it’s not working? When do you accept that, despite your conviction that you were doing the right thing, changes in the environment have made your initial decision questionable? Do you hang in there at all costs, hoping against hope that further events will eventually justify your decisions?
All of this boils down to the following: how to strike a balance between trying to predict an uncertain future and knowing you can’t. We all know that financial shocks are inevitable. But who would have predicted a few years ago that the 1990s dotcom bubble would be supplanted by a housing bubble that would topple the global financial system? Who would have predicted the global rise in commodity prices like wheat, corn, and rice and the resultant impact on food prices worldwide? A few years ago, who would have thought that oil would top even $75 a barrel, let alone $100?
Nonetheless, most of us could have considered the finite supply of fossil fuel and at least have been thinking about what that could mean for every organization, big or small. Most leaders hope that someone else is thinking about this for them, but almost everyone should have been concerned about this and planning for contingencies. What happens if oil goes to $200? How will this impact your supply chain? How will it affect your customers? Your employees?
While you can’t predict these types of things, planning and developing a point of view -- no matter where you sit in the organization -- is essential. It opens your eyes to new ideas, helps you interact with a wider range of people, and can help you take action in even the most unstable times. And it allows you to gain a better idea of how you should prioritize the allocation of your resources and the attention of your organization.
Home Shopping Network is a company whose leaders spend a large part of their time planning for contingencies, because their customers are buying discretionary products with money not spent on gas, food and other essentials. The leadership team begins its meetings every week by asking, “What is happening that is affecting our business?” and, “What is happening that affects our employees, our customers and our future?” CEO Mindy Grossman believes that the discipline of regularly asking these questions and focusing on the uncertainty in the environment results in the leaders’ developing a point of view about what they should address as a group.
[This article has been reprinted, with permission, from Rotman Management, the magazine of the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management]