Toward a Freakier Mind-Set
Finding and interpreting signals or outliers in the
landscape is not simply a matter of visual prowess, but of thinking differently
about what is seen or even sought. It is part of the job for foresight
professionals, which may be why many of us self-identify as geeks or freaks.
The authors of Freakonomics
(2005) and SuperFreakonomics (2011) now
share techniques for training your mind to think differently, a prerequisite
for foresight. The process is at first humbling, then rewarding, promise University
of Chicago economist Steven D. Levitt
and journalist Stephen J. Dubner.
Why humbling? Because one of the first things that anyone
doing any kind of research needs to be able to say is “I don’t know.” And it is
this very phrase that most professionals are reluctant to utter, whether to a
supervisor, a client, or a child.
“That’s a shame,” write Levitt and Dubner, “for until you
can admit what you don’t yet know, it’s virtually impossible to learn what you
need to.”
Forecasters who rely on extrapolating trends into the
future, without regard to alternative possibilities, may simply be bluffing—or,
worse, imposing their own dogma onto the projected landscape, the authors warn.
But which is worse, admitting up front that you don’t know, or ultimately being
proven wrong? As in the case of Iraq’s possession (or not) of weapons of mass
destruction, sometimes “the societal costs of faking it can be huge,” the authors
note.
Another humbling technique for freakier thinking is to think
as a child would. Magicians know that children are harder to trick than
grownups are, because magic, or illusion, is based on diverting the audience’s
attention with social cues: When they point to the hand that does not have the ball, grownups follow the
cue while children follow the ball. As grownups, we need to unlearn some of
these social cues in order to think like a freak—er, child.
Childlike thinking also involves breaking down big problems
into smaller ones. For instance, with the big problem of improving academic
achievement, the big, grownup solution is to overhaul education systems. But as
Levitt and Dubner point out, “One in four children, it turns out, has subpar
eyesight, while a whopping 60 percent of ‘problem learners’ have trouble
seeing.” So a smaller solution to our big problem might be to improve vision
screening.
Think Like a Freak
is well-populated with case studies for freaky thinking in business, which
should prove of value to futurists and foresight professionals working with business
trends and clients. Much of this relates to developing persuasiveness, clearly a
key trait to success in any endeavor.
Finding the right incentives, for instance, has enabled Zappos,
the online shoe sales company, to attract outstanding talent to its team and
give customers more than an easy way to buy shoes. What Zappos offers customers
besides shoes, according to Levitt and Dubner, is friendliness, turning its
customer representatives into talk therapists.
Wouldn’t that cost more? Rather than higher salaries, Zappos
offers its reps more power, more authority to resolve customers’ problems; it
also makes work more fun.
“Thinking like a freak may sometimes sound like an exercise
in using clever means to get exactly what you want, and there’s nothing wrong
with that,” the authors write. But “the best way to get what you want is to
treat other people with decency. Decency can push almost any interaction into
the cooperative frame.”
Persuading those who do not want to be persuaded is another
tough act of freaky thinking. For example, not everyone buys into the trendy idea
that Driverless cars are the future!
Clearly, professional drivers whose jobs would be in jeopardy are not persuaded
about this vision, nor are environmentalists who foresee more cars being put on
the roads, exacerbating congestion and pollution. But rather than insulting
such critics, calling them luddites, proponents of driverless cars should
acknowledge the strength of the arguments, Levitt and Dubner suggest.
Finally, the bravest act of freaky thinking may very well be
admitting failure. We certainly value fortitude and determination, but not obsessiveness
in the face of futility. Quitting isn’t failure, the authors remind us; failing
is failure. The upside to quitting—to recognizing a brick wall before you hit
it—is reserving resources and resilience for finding a way around, over, or
even under that brick wall.
“Think about all the time, brain power, and social or
political capital you continued to spend on some commitment only because you
didn’t like the idea of quitting,” write Levitt and Dubner. “Resources are not
infinite: you cannot solve tomorrow’s problem if you aren’t willing to abandon
today’s dud.”
Of course, we don’t want future Edisons to abandon their
light bulbs before they get to the eleven-thousand-and-first experiment that
finally succeeds. So how do you predict failure before it happens? One freaky
idea is to use “pre-mortem” (as opposed to post-mortem) analysis, in the
terminology of psychologist Gary Klein, offering team members on a project the
opportunity to (anonymously) imagine everything that could go wrong and the
reasons behind a potential failure.
And if the word “quitting” still unnerves you, borrow the currently
popular girls’ anthem from Frozen: “Let it go.”
Basically, thinking like a freak is about thinking “a bit
differently, a bit harder, a bit more freely,” write Levitt and Dubner. And
these are activities we surely ought not to quit.
Cynthia G. Wagner
(@CynWag1)
is the consulting editor of Foresight
SIGNALS.
Photos via Amazon.com
authors’ pages.
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