Title: HARD FACTS, DANGEROUS HALF TRUTHS, AND TOTAL NONSENSE:
1- HARD FACTS, DANGEROUS HALF TRUTHS, AND TOTAL
NONSENSE - PROFITING FROM EVIDENCE-BASED MANAGEMENT
- Robert Sutton
- Stanford University
2Why We Need Evidence Based-Management
- Three reasons that convinced us the time was ripe
3IMPETUS 1 REACTIONS TO THE KNOWING-DOING GAP
4PAY DISPERSION A TROUBLING DOING-KNOWING GAP
- Rank and yank
- A,B,C rankings
-
- War for Talent Differentiate and affirm
5CONTRADICTED BY EVERY PEER-REVIEWED STUDY
- Spread between CEO pay and next three
executives - Baseball teams Smaller differences between top
50 and bottom 50 linked to better attendance,
media income, and win-loss records
6IMPETUS 2 THE EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE
MOVEMENT
- Striving to bring the best evidence to the
bedside in ways that physicians can actually use -
7Dr. Kevin Patterson
- People, doctors included, have a tendency to
see what they expect to see. Its the premise of
every sleight-of-hand game. If it makes sense
that a treatment will workthen a doctor will,
with alarming and disheartening reliability,
perceive that it does in fact work.
8DR. DAVID SACKETT AND OTHERS IN THE EBM MOVEMENT
- Weave conversations using evidence into clinical
training - Summarize evidence in forms that physicians can
quickly use and grasp, in journals like
Evidence-Based Medicine - Often simple things Hand washing
- NCH Healthcare Its OK to ask campaign
9IMPETUS 3 ORGANIZATIONS HAVE PROFOUND EFFECTS
ON PEOPLE AND SOCIETY
- Studies of mortality rates in hospitals
- British study of 61 hospitals links use of common
HR practices training and performance
evaluation systems to lower mortality rates.
10IMPETUS 3 ORGANIZATIONS HAVE PROFOUND EFFECTS
ON PEOPLE AND SOCIETY
- 2007 study of 532 American found that 44 had at
least one abusive boss. - 1997 study of 130 U.S. nurses in the Journal of
Professional Nursing found 90 were victims of
verbal abuse by physicians (6 to 12 incidents in
past year). - 2006 longitudinal study of 3000 medical students
from 16 U.S. medical schools in the BMJ 42
percent of seniors were harassed 84 percent
belittled
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12II. WHAT IS EVIDENCE-BASED MANAGEMENT?
- A way of thinking
- Being committed to fact-based and
evidence-based action - The attitude of wisdom
- The courage to act on what you know and the
humility to update when better evidence comes
along - Treating your organization as an unfinished
prototype
13 CORPORATE MERGERS
- When a larger company buys a smaller company with
stock - About 70 fail to deliver the anticipated
economic value - Analysis of 93 studies covering over 200,000
mergers Negative effects of shareholders value
evident less than one month after announcement
14MERGERS ARE ESPECIALLY RISKY WHEN....
- When CEOs suffer from hubris bigger acquisition
premiums - When the two companies are closer to the same
size (e.g., Daimler-Chrysler) - Insufficient attention is devoted to integration
-
15HOW CISCO BEAT THE ODDS
- Focus on acquiring smaller companies, close by,
and where there is cultural fit. - Devote enormous effort to merger integration
- Do constant post-mortems and constantly update
Ciscos decision-making and merger integration
process -
16CENTERING THE SEARCH BOX ON YAHOOS HOME PAGE
- IE Version
Netscape Version
DATA SHOWED THAT NETSCAPE USERS HAD HIGHER SEARCH
USAGE DATA
17III. MANAGEMENT IS A CRAFT, NOT A SCIENCE
- You can only learn it by doing it
- Like medicine, using better evidence higher
success rate
18IV. Hazards of Business Advice
- There is too much
- Much of it is bad
- Much of it clashes
19The market for business knowledge
- 2000 business books published per year (35,000
in print, conferences, dozens of business
publications films and Web events, experts,
consultants, and consulting firms, lots of
research)
20WARRING BOOK TITLES
- In Search of Excellence
- Charisma Seven Keys to Developing the Magnetism
that Leads to Success - Love is the Killer App
- The Peaceable Kingdom
- Managing with Passion
- Out of the Box
- Built to Last Successful Habitsof Visionary
Companies
- The Myth of Excellence
- Leading Quietly An Unorthodox Guide to Doing the
Right Thing - Business is Combat
- Capitalizing on Conflict
- Managing by Measuring
- Thinking Inside the Box
- Corporate Failure by Design Why Organizations
are Builtto Fail
21Standards for Judging Business Advice
- Treat old ideas as if they are old ideas
- What are the incentives?
- Avoid the best practices trap
22A. Treat old ideas as if they are old ideas
- HBRs breakthrough ideas
-
- Dont hire jerks?
- Do practice evidence-based management?
23James March on breakthroughs
- Most claims of originality are testimony to
ignorance and most claims of magic are
testimonial to hubris.
24B. What are the incentives?
- Large software implementations
- Who gains and loses, regardless of the financial
outcome for your organization?
25C. The trouble with best practices
- What is good for them might be bad for you
- It might help you, if implementing it doesnt
kill your organization first - Great people and companies succeed despite rather
than because of some practices
26Correlation is Not Causation
- Herb and Southwest
- Should you start drinking a quart of Wild Turkey
each day?
27V. THE BEST EVIDENCE REVEALS MANY DANGEROUS
HALF-TRUTHS
- Work is Fundamentally Different From the Rest of
Life, and Should Be? - The Best Organizations Have the Best People?
- Financial Incentives Drive Company Performance?
- Strategy is Destiny?
- Change is Difficult Takes a Long Time?
- Great Leaders are in Control of their Companies,
and Ought to Be
28Dangerous Half-Truth
- Change is Difficult Takes a Long Time?
29Change Can Be Hard to Accept
- It makes human-beings squirm
- Breaking out of a mindless state isnt easy
-
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31Change Can Be Hard to Accept
- The confirmation bias problem we love our
beliefs and dismiss ideas that clash with them. - Kodak and digital photography
32Change is Hard to Accept
- Shoot the messenger problem executives often
dont like to hear the bad news - The HP VP who gave Carly the bad news about
Compaq products she blamed him.
33Most Changes Fail
- Mergers
- Enterprise Software Implementations take longer
than expected and fail at substantial rate
(Hershey missed Halloween) - Quality Improvement. Often window dressing and
linked to more incremental innovation (Kodak)
34Most Changes Fail
- Layoffs Bain study shows that layoffs associated
with modest drops on stock price and may take 18
months to get savings and firms often need the
people again by then. - New product introductions. Less than 1 of
compounds developed by pharma firms ever sold.
30 to 60 of new product introductions fail.
35The Dilemma of Change
- The only thing more risky than doing change is
not doing any at all!
36Some Decision Criteria
- Is there a good reason to believe that the new
practice is actually better? - Is the change really worth the disruption?
- Is it best to only make symbolic changes?
- Are people already suffering from the flavor of
the month problem - Will you be able to pull the plug at least
cheaply.
37Watch the Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
- Does change really need to be difficult and take
a long time? - Urgency, deadlines, and belief it can happen can
help a lot - Continental Airlines From worst to first in on
time performance in a year - DaVita Went from near bankruptcy and suspect
treatment outcomes, to, less than 2 years later,
stock price up from 2 to 40 and among the best
treatment outcomes in the businesses
38 Big Four for Making Change Happen After A
Decision
- Dissatisfaction
- Direction
- Overconfidence punctuated by self-doubt and
updating - Embrace the mess
39DANGEROUS HALF-TRUTH
- GREAT LEADERS ARE IN CONTROL OF THEIR COMPANIES,
AND OUGHT TO BE? -
- Leaders matter far less than most people think
their control is partly a cognitive illusion
40Former GE executive Spencer Clark
- Jack did a good job, but everyone seems to
forget that the company had been around for over
a hundred years before he ever took the job and
he had 70,000 other people to help him.
41All Leaders Make Lots of Mistakes
42THE DILEMMA LEADERSHIP REQUIRES MAINTAINING THE
ILLUSION OF CONTROL
- If you dont pretend to be in control, you will
never get or keep a leadership job. - If you dont pretend to be in control, you will
never achieve any actual influence over the
situation and make necessary changes
43- I think it is very important for you to do two
things act on your temporary conviction as if it
was a real conviction and when you realize that
you are wrong, correct course very quickly . And
try not to get too depressed in the part of the
journey, because theres a professional
responsibility. If you are depressed, you cant
motivate your staff to extraordinary measures. So
you have to keep your own spirits up even though
you well understand that you dont know what
youre doing. - - Andy Grove, Intel
44How to fuel the illusion and reality of control
Playing The Blame Game
- Taking credit (and some blame) for what
happensand always talking as if the situation
can be controlled - Research shows that leaders who attribute
setbacks to controllable but internal factors
preside over more successful organizations
45ACCEPTING RESPONSIBIITY THE RIGHT WAY
- Take at least partial responsibility for the
problems, particularly those that actually are
your fault (Loveman and a bad health insurance
decision) - Announce actions you are takingand others can
taketo bolster performance -
46WARNING 1 BECOMING A LEADER CAN MAKE YOU A
JERK!
- Putting people in power
- Makes them oblivious to reactions and needs of
people with less power - Makes them more focused on satisfying their own
needs and wants
47THE COOKIE STUDY
- Three Berkeley students, five cookies
- Two students brainstorm and the third has the
power to evaluate their ideas - Those with power tend to
- Take the fourth cookie
- Eat with their mouths open
- Leave more crumbs
48WARNING 2 THE BEST LEADERSHIP IS SOMETIMES LESS
LEADERSHIP
- The message from George Patton, John Wayne,
and MBA educationLeaders - Monitor
- Ask questions
- Give lots of feedback
49 - When you plant a seed in the ground, you
dont dig it up every week to see how it is
doing. -
- - William Coyne, Former EVP, 3M
50PARTING THOUGHT 1 MASTER THE OBVIOUS AND MUNDANE
- Obvious Nothing can have an effect unless you
actually do it - Mundane Conscientious people and standing-up
(and washing your hands!)
51PARTING THOUGHT 2 THE BEST SINGLE DIAGNOSTIC
QUESTION
- What Happens When People Fail?
- Forgive and remember
- The importance of setbacks for innovation and
learning
52Teach us more, learn more
- Email
- robert.sutton_at_stanford.edu
- Blogs
- www.bobsutton.net
- http//discussionleader.hbsp.com/sutton/