What if you could make better decisions? Even with the biggest, life-altering choices, such as where to live, who to marry, or whether to start a company?
Steven Johnson, author of the book, Farsighted: How We Make the Decisions that Matter the Most, thinks we often face decisions like this with little to no training and that we could use more tools in our decision-making toolbox. Steven is the bestselling author of ten books, including Wonderland, How we Got to Now, Where Good Ideas Come From, The Invention of Air, The Ghost Map, and Everything Bad is Good for You. He is also the host and creator of the PBS and BBC series How We Got to Now.
When it comes to complex decision making, he thinks we can do better, and in this interview about his latest book, Farsighted, he shares strategic approaches to help us get there.
In this interview we discuss:
How our most important decisions are complex and life-defining yet our approach to them is often too simple and quick
Why breaking complex decisions into steps can help us get started
Why you may never use a simple pros and cons list again
How mapping all the variables that influence your decision can provide more wisdom
Why our decision-making blindspots actually limit the kinds of decisions we make
The important role outsiders or non-experts can play in expanding options for decision making
Why diverse teams make more intelligent, thoughtful decisions than homogeneous teams
The important roles uncertainty and lack of confidence play in making smarter decisions
Why we need to take the either-or option off the decision-making table
How influence diagrams can help us map who might be influenced or impacted by our decisions
How charrettes can ensure we’ll get feedback from diverse stakeholders
Why it’s important to speak to group members individually when trying to make a thoughtful decision
The important role daydreaming plays in predicting outcomes in decision making
The characteristics and practices of the most accurate predictors
Why it’s important to map the degree to which we’re uncertain as we make important decisions
How an effective decision-making process can help us work our way into important insights that may never have occurred to us otherwise
Why we should try value models over pros and cons lists
How reading novels provides decision-making simulations that help us practice
Why decision making may be one of the top five skills we need to learn
Links to Episode Topics
https://stevenberlinjohnson.com/
@stevenbjohnson
How We Got to Now|PBS
Collect Pond
Pierre Charles L’Enfant
Paul C. Nutt
Highline in NYC
Katherine W. Phillips
Decisive by Dan and Chip Heath
Influence diagram
Charrette
Simple Rules by Donald Sull
Phillip E. Tetlock
Thomas C. Schelling
Value model
Middlemarch by George Eliot
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