1 / 6

Groupthink

Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is , how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it . It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. What is Groupthink?

Download Presentation

Groupthink

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is, how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it. It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. • What is Groupthink? • Groupthink is a phenomenon first described by research psychologist Irving Janis of Yale University. • Simply put, Groupthink is the tendency of a cohesive • group to reach consensus without critically testing or evaluating their decisions. Creativity and independent thought are lost in pursuit of the group’s “comfort zone”. • Disasters attributed to this kind of decision-making failure include: • Failure to anticipate the Pearl Harborattack (1941). • The Bay of Pigs fiasco (1961). • The loss of the Space Shuttle Challenger (1986).

  2. Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is, how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it. It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. • What are the symptoms? • Janis identified eight symptoms that indicate a group could be experiencing Groupthink: • Illusions of invulnerability: “This ship can’t sink – it’s the Titanic!” • Rationalising warnings: “Oh, you’re just being negative...” • Unquestioned belief in morality: “We know we’re right!” • Stereotyping the opposition: “Anyone who doesn’t agree is a fool...” • Direct pressure:“Are you disagreeing with me..?” • Self-censorship: “Let’s not think about what might go wrong...” • Illusions of unanimity: “Nobody’s saying anything, so we’re all agreed...” • Self-appointed ‘mind guards’: “You better not be disagreeing with the boss..!”

  3. Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is, how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it. It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. • How do we avoid it? • Janis also devised seven ways of avoiding Groupthink. • Make it clear that group members are welcome to critically evaluate decisions. • Don’t allow the group leader to state their opinion before the discussion. • Split the group into smaller, independent sub-groups working on the same problem. • Systematically examine all the alternatives. • Encourage group members to discuss ideas with people independent of the group. • Invite outside experts to contribute and discuss their opinions with the group. • Assign one group member the role of “Devil’s Advocate” (a different person for each meeting). • After the Bay of Pigs, Kennedy used such methods to successfully defuse the Cuban Missile Crisis.

  4. Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is, how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it. It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. • What is Groupthink? • Groupthink is a phenomenon first described by research psychologist Irving Janis of Yale University. • Simply put, Groupthink is the tendency of a cohesive • group to reach consensus without critically testing or evaluating their decisions. Creativity and independent thought are lost in pursuit of the group’s “comfort zone”. • Disasters attributed to this kind of decision-making failure include: • Failure to anticipate the Pearl Harborattack (1941). • The Bay of Pigs fiasco (1961). • The loss of the Space Shuttle Challenger (1986).

  5. Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is, how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it. It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. • How do we avoid it? • Janis also devised seven ways of avoiding Groupthink. • Make it clear that group members are welcome to critically evaluate decisions. • Don’t allow the group leader to state their opinion before the discussion. • Split the group into smaller, independent sub-groups working on the same problem. • Systematically examine all the alternatives. • Encourage group members to discuss ideas with people independent of the group. • Invite outside experts to contribute and discuss their opinions with the group. • Assign one group member the role of “Devil’s Advocate” (a different person for each meeting). • After the Bay of Pigs, Kennedy used such methods to successfully defuse the Cuban Missile Crisis.

  6. Groupthink Could your team or organisation be suffering from Groupthink? Find out: what it is, how to spot it and what you can do to avoid it. It could mean the difference between a good decision and a disaster... Click another Tab. • What are the symptoms? • Janis identified eight symptoms that indicate a group could be experiencing Groupthink: • Illusions of invulnerability: “This ship can’t sink – it’s the Titanic!” • Rationalising warnings: “Oh, you’re just being negative...” • Unquestioned belief in morality: “We know we’re right!” • Stereotyping the opposition: “Anyone who doesn’t agree is a fool...” • Direct pressure:“Are you disagreeing with me..?” • Self-censorship: “Let’s not think about what might go wrong...” • Illusions of unanimity: “Nobody’s saying anything, so we’re all agreed...” • Self-appointed ‘mind guards’: “You better not be disagreeing with the boss..!”

More Related