Is fast thinking slowing you down?

Susan Letterman White, BridgeTower Media Newswires

In 2012, Facebook conducted an experiment to see whether it could influence the emotions and postings of its users by curating news feed content calculated to manipulate mood. The experiment worked.

If you had any doubt that your decision-making is affected by forces that fall below your radar, this should make it clear that even if you are not interested in knowing how you make decisions, other people are.

Neuroscience has made its way into mainstream thinking and lawyers are catching up. We're beginning to talk about the impact of neurochemistry on our decisions about whom to hire and how we apply objective standards in subjective ways to evaluate performance and allocate compensation and rewards.

Unconscious forces pervade our thinking, feelings and decision-making every day, yet there is little talk about this reality.

More important than discussing the exact neuroscience behind behavior is to acknowledge the possibility that your decision-making isn't always as logical as you think it is. Do your actions always match up with your intentions and aim?

If you agree it's possible that, on occasion, your decisions are flawed, then it makes sense to develop self-awareness of how you make decisions and a strategy to stop, evaluate and perhaps slow down your fast thinking when it happens.

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Fast thinking and its impact

Nobel laurate and founder of behavioral economics Daniel Kahneman has explained fast thinking. There are two systems of thinking: System 1 is fast and based on a gut reaction, and system 2 is slower, conscious and deliberate. Fast thinking is the unconscious bias that affects our thinking, decisions and behaviors. It can, under certain circumstances, lead to unintended outcomes.

The phenomena that comprise fast thinking are pervasive. They affect how we feel and what we think. They affect our perception of events - what we notice and miss - and decisions about meaning and what to do. There are times when fast thinking creates the results we want. This column is about the times it creates results that do not match our intention.

Without you knowing it, your fast thinking may lead to miscommunication and misunderstanding. It may cause you to negotiate a less advantageous agreement or lose a prospect or client. It may create chaos in the workplace and interfere with good client relationships, colleague collaboration, and effective organization performance. Understanding when your tendency to think fast is triggered is the first step.

Sometimes, we cannot know what we don't know and must rely on feedback from others for a fact-check to avoid jumping to the wrong conclusions. If a goal is to make evidence-based decisions, then knowing common mental shortcuts is a start. Here are a few.

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Anchoring

The hidden process of anchoring makes the first piece of information you notice seem to be more important. It blocks thinking about possibilities. In a negotiation over money, the first number heard sets the tone and movement for the entire negotiation. This doesn't mean that if you throw out an unreasonably high or low number, you'll end up with a higher or lower result. The number must seem reasonable. If not, it could stall further discussions.

Availability

Availability refers to giving too much weight to personal information and not enough weight to the array of relevant information. Example: believing that success is based on hard work alone because of personal experience that minimizes the value of being born into a powerful network that has presented opportunities and affected performance evaluation or the resources to improve performance ability.

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Representativeness

Representativeness refers to predicting that a certain person will have certain characteristics or abilities based on their similarity to a stereotype. One example: judging mathematical ability by the choice of attire - a pen in a shirt pocket with a pocket protector. Another: expecting that a parent who could not travel for work one week shouldn't be offered a travel opportunity for a different week.

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Loss aversion

The desire to avoid feelings of loss. All change efforts involve the sense of loss of certainty and what is familiar even when change leads to a financial or other gain. For example: choosing to stay in a job that makes you unhappy instead of exploring other possibilities for fear that you'll lose a safe situation.

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Confirmation bias

Confirmation bias refers to the tendency to notice and accept only information that confirms your position, while not noticing or ignoring evidence that undermines it. One example: An expert witness examines evidence that is open to interpretation after seeing other evidence of an accused's guilt and interprets it in strong support of guilt. Another: You have already decided that you do or don't want to confront a co-worker on his behavior that was hurtful and unprofessional. When you consider your decision, all you notice are reasons that support it.

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Compensating for fast thinking

Develop a habit of scanning your feelings - physical and emotional. Strong feelings can impact your ability to make reasoned decisions. Learn to notice when you are feeling stressed emotionally or physically. Learn to recognize your emotions. Stress, illness, tiredness, anger, fear, excitement, and other physical and emotional feelings play a role in your decision-making.

Expect fast thinking any time you are trying to make a personal change or a change to the way you run your business.

If you are having strong feelings, stop and think about how they are affecting your decision-making ability.

If possible, postpone important decisions until you are feeling more neutral.

If postponing is not an option, use your emotional intelligence skills. Take a deep breath and manage your emotions.

Schedule important decisions for a time when you have enough energy to contribute to the task. Don't make important decisions when you are hungry or tired.

Take your time to make important decisions. Think about them overnight. Consider possible outcomes to your behavior, including your feelings.

Incorporate processes to avoid wasting energy on routine decisions or allowing your fast thinking to intervene when inappropriate. For example, read and respond to email at certain times of the day instead of allowing it to interrupt your work.

An effective way to counter your own confirmation biases is to ask others for their perspectives on the data behind your decision and the decision itself.

If you make a mistake, acknowledge and correct it as soon as possible. The risk of not doing so is piling on self-serving justifications for making the mistake.

If you gravitate toward the first suggestion or idea, gather more information about the purpose or goal for accepting the suggestion or idea and then re-evaluate whether the first one is the best.

Never assume how someone else is thinking and feeling. Never assume that you know what they are capable of doing. Our assumptions are often based on incomplete or irrelevant data. Force yourself to prove your assumptions are true before you take them as fact.

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Conclusion

Fast thinking can interfere with communication with clients, colleagues and yourself. Ultimately, what matters is whether the ways you think, feel and act are moving you closer to your goals or farther from them. Managing or leveraging fast-thinking biases begins with self-awareness and self-management.

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Susan Letterman White works with lawyers and law firms to improve leadership, organizational and team performance, and marketing and business development. She practiced employment law for more than 20 years.

Published: Fri, Jun 08, 2018