Thursday, December 8, 2011

When To Make Critical Decisions

David Allen's (GTD) recent newsletter provides excellent insights from research on artful decision making.  This is David's summary.  He provides additional insights in his fantastic books and seminars.  Any leader of complex projects and programs will benefit.


1. Don't force your team (or youtself) to make decisions in the same meeting that presents all the data and perspectives. Purely conscious decision-making is quite constrained in its capacity to absorb and weigh complexities and more likely to employ limiting stereotypes and prejudices in its judgments.

2. Another validation of the power of the GTD Weekly Review. We have to make a lot of choices on the run, in the helter-skelter of our daily existence. You don't have time to think and ponder and consider all the factors. Putting all the potentially relevant data into your psyche every seven days (doing a thorough Weekly Review of your commitments, areas of focus, someday maybe's, time-based commitments, etc.) hard-wires your intuitive intelligence, which allows you trust (vs. hope) in your quick judgment calls.
3. Positive outcome focus as a way to create what you want is not just a hope-it-works belief—it's verifiable as a tool to put your unconscious thinking to work. The reticular activating system in the brain—the part of our neurology that gets programmed to recognize patterns, based upon our focus and identifications with images and outcomes—gets us to see and think things otherwise inaccessible. Now we have good data to prove that this not only impacts our conscious perceptions, but also (and perhaps more importantly) our unconscious integrative processes.

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