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Seeing Both Sides of an Issue

The ability to see both sides of an issue is a critical executive skill.  Yet, in typical corporate America culture, that skill is all too often lost.  Why?

The solution is to force managers to articulate both sides of important issues.  If a person is advocating thing X instead of thing Y, I want them to be able to clearly and convincing explain the advantages of both.  The best decisions come, in my opinion, when you hold two opposing ideas in your mind at once, and then choose.

When done correctly, you will see:

But seeing both sides of an issue only gets you halfway to your goal.   In many big companies, the unintended dysfunctional consequence of doing so is passivity and fence sitting:

Somewhere along the way in corporate America, managers forgot that they are paid to make decisions.  The point of seeing both sides isn’t to avoid decision making.  The point is to make better decisions.

To ensure a focus on decisions, I usually run a line of questioning that starts with the decision and backs up from there.

If you’re already performing these techniques, great.  If you’re not, give them a try and let me know how it works.

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