LeadershipHQ Magazine June 2015 2nd Edition | Page 14
DESTROY your
business today!
The best way to work out what to do with your business, your staff and your sales is by working out
the best way to do what you don’t want to do. Confused? (I know I am!) Read on.
Often when we consider growth options, we brainstorm ways we can improve. We think of great
ideas that can grow our business and open new opportunities but 12 months on these ideas are
just a memory. As humans, we have cognitive biases, which inhibit our ability to gain perspective,
particularly when our own personal success and livelihood are on the line. How can we counter
this part of our nature? It’s time for some DESTRUCTION!
By ‘destruction’, I am referring to a tool called reverse brainstorming. Instead of brainstorming ideas
to accomplish your goals, reverse brainstorming involves thinking ideas to accomplish the opposite.
When the target is no longer ‘success’ but instead is ‘destruction’, the cognitive biases that limit our
thinking are removed, as there is no longer any personal threat in these concepts. Here are two
common business examples:
Example 1: Disengage your staff!
The start of each year usually involves
Human Resource teams coming together
and brainstorming ways they can engage
their staff. Employee engagement is one
of the key drivers in business productivity
and a lack of engagement can lead to
increased workplace incidents, increased
attrition, increased unplanned leave and
poor performance. HR teams everywhere
ask themselves “How can we improve our
employee engagement?” and they get
answers like this:
• Start a loyalty program that rewards
employees for staying with the company
• Organise a monthly ‘team building’ event
or excursion
• Create a new intranet for staff to
communicate with each other
While these answers might generate
engagement, they will likely involve
significant resource investment and may
not address underlying adverse factors
affecting employee engagement. There
is a cognitive bias telling us that current
employee engagement is already maximised
so improving engagement must require
14 | © LeadershipHQ 2015
additional programs. Ironically, these extra
programs can end up putting more strain on
staff and can even lead to less engagement
as a result!
Conversely, we could reverse brainstorm
along this question: “How we can disengage
our staff so that they will leave?” This might
get answers like:
• Pay them incorrectly or not at all
• Increase their work hours
• Encourage their line manager to bully them
• Put them on a project for a week and then
cancel the project
• Constantly move the ‘goalposts’
• Make them clean the toilets every day
• Put them in performance management
While responses could be considered
‘extreme’ or ‘silly’, these answers are actually
more useful at developing a comprehensive
strategy to improve engagement. The lack
of cognitive bias shows the many facets
that affect employee engagement day
to day and this is what needs to be managed,
often with a much lower requirement
for resources.