Back in September, I joined the YMCA. It’s a three-minute walk from the Workomics office. That proximity has been wonderful — getting both a workout and the change of scenery and camaraderie of the office creates a gravitational pull that I really relish.
The gym is nice and the exercise is good for me, but the most magical part is what happens between the workout and the office, as I’m getting showered and ready for my workday: the pensioners start to arrive in the locker room for their AquaFit class. It’s marvellous — a community build entirely around the shared experience of fitness classes at the Y. Best I can tell, most of them don’t see each other outside the gym, but many of them come every day. They range in age from 60s to 90s. Some need to rely on their canes to walk from locker room to pool, while others are doing AquaFit after their morning pickle ball game. They talk about their families and their favourite instructors and their holiday plans and their political opinions and the relative merits of various joint replacements. They will absolutely take the time to compliment your cute outfit.
I’m not part of this community (although I gratefully accept any and all compliments on my outfits), but it completely makes my gym experience. In the past, I’ve had gym memberships in places and spaces designed for people like me — young(ish) professionals squeezing in a workout before or after work, or parents doing a fitness class while the gym is offering childcare. In those environments, exercise is a rush or a chore — something to be squeezed in somehow, someway, between countless competing priorities.
These ladies at the Y are in a different stage of life. They don’t have jobs to rush to anymore. Their children are people who visit, not people who demand constant attention. They tell each other about how wonderful it was when all the family assembled last weekend for a 90th birthday or a 60th wedding anniversary. (They almost never see all the children and grandchildren together anymore, and it’s so nice when they do.) And in between, they take great pleasure in moving their bodies and connecting with one another.
Overhearing these conversations is such a gift. I don’t know about you, but I’ve reached the point in January where my new-year, fresh-start energy is on the wane, and the frigid temperatures and scarce sunlight are not helping my motivation or my mood. But on weekday mornings, I get a visceral reminder of so many things: that this stage of life is fleeting; that there is so much that is wonderful about it, even as it feels exhausting and frenetic; that our bodies and the communities we make for ourselves will be what endures. In 30, 40, 50 years, I aspire to be like those ladies at the Y. Their example helps me get myself to the gym each morning, and focus on what really matters for the rest of the day.
How does an organization reverse a decision?
You may be familiar with this typology of decisions from Jeff Bezos’s 2015 Letter to Amazon Shareholders:
Type 1 Decisions are not easily reversed — “one-way doors.” These decisions should be made with ample consultation and careful consideration of wide-reaching implications.
Type 2 Decisions are easily reversed — “two-way doors.” If we make this decision and don’t like the outcome, we can always go back through the door. These decisions should be made quickly. Rather than spend a lot of time carefully weighing theoretical risks, the decision can be implemented and we can see the real-world data.
Bezos’s observation is that as companies grow, they have an increasing tendency to use a long, slow Type 1 decision-making process on easily-reversible Type 2 decisions. It’s one of the things that makes large companies more risk-averse and less nimble than their smaller counterparts.
Of course, in the real world, there isn’t a neat dichotomy. Is getting married an “easily reversible” decision? That depends on a lot of factors: the culture and laws of where you live, the values and personalities of the individuals. But perhaps the two biggest factors are how much time has passed since the initial decision, and how the decision was initially framed. If you had a spur-of-the-moment Vegas wedding last week, that is probably easily reversed. If you’re twenty years into a marriage with children and joint property, it’s still possible to reverse the decision, but it’s much more difficult to do so.
Nonetheless, I really like this framework. It’s a helpful heuristic, especially for getting out of analysis paralysis. If a decision feels reversible, probably best to choose a path and see what happens. Especially in a large organization, you’re almost certainly erring on the side of being too slow and risk averse.
Except.
Organizations often lack good mechanisms for undoing decisions. Once a decision has been made, a new status quo calcifies very quickly, and it can be surprisingly difficult to change course. It doesn’t matter how big or small the decision or even why it was made — the team will meet 2-3pm every Monday, we will eliminate the training budget, we will cater lunch on the last Friday of the month, everyone will work from home. In theory, it would be easy to reverse any one of those decisions; in practice, Shopify needed to have a bot delete 322,000 hours of recurring meetings from company calendars.
Organizational inertia is incredibly powerful. A decision might feel like a Type 2 decision, but once it’s been implemented, reversing it can be more challenging than you imagined. That doesn’t mean organizations continue on the same path forever. It means organizations tend to stay on the same path for too long, until there is some internal crisis or external force that requires a large-scale, capital-T transformation. Then a whole lot of decisions get made at once in a way that can be more destabilizing and less nuanced than if the organization could only figure out how to undo individual decisions more effectively.
Bringing a pilot mindset to decisions
Organizations already have a concept for when they want to make a reversible decision, although they don’t usually think of it that way: a pilot. Pilots are typically seen as a way to iron out any kinks before a wider program goes ahead. But equally, pilots are a way to make a decision into a two-way door.
Typically, pilots are smaller in scale, which makes undoing a decision less costly. But from the lens of reversibility, it’s perhaps more important that pilots define an endpoint. The endpoint creates an explicit opportunity to undo a decision or double-down on it. Piloting makes is clear to all the stakeholders that “undo” is a possible outcome. That makes us more willing to use metrics as a barometer for whether we should reverse a decision, and more open to changing our mind in the face of unexpected side effects.
The trouble is that most organizations use the notion of pilots very narrowly. They reserve the concept for significant investments, often customer facing, always perceived as risky. But the notion of piloting can be applied much more broadly, as a mindset that is adopted for just about any decision made by any person in an organization.
Adopting a pilot mindset doesn’t have to be a big undertaking. To pilot a decision, all you really need is an end date: the appointment an organization has made with itself to revisit the decision and see how well it’s working. It’s great if you can define your criteria for success up-front and measure pro-actively. But there’s nothing inherently wrong with retrospective evaluation. What really matters is creating a shared understanding that the decision is being made for now, based on the information available, and we won’t hesitate to reverse course if different data emerges.
Creating an end date on a decision can be as simple as a hold in a calendar: “Decide whether we want to continue with X.” Once that mindset is pervasive, more of your organizations’ decisions will be genuine two-way doors. When decisions are more reversible, people will be able to make them more quickly and confidently, enabling the organization to be more nimble overall. As an added benefit, a pilot mindset inculcates more curiosity in your team. Instead of going into maintenance mode because a decision has been made, the team has a strong incentive to pay attention to the implementation, notice what is and isn’t working, and make adjustments as they go.
Enabling more nuanced reversal of decisions
In the absence of a pilot mindset, organizations still find ways to change direction, but that change tends towards all-or-nothing. If everyone is operating under the certainty of a one-way door, it’s difficult to both reverse the decision and make subtle distinctions. If we were zigging before, now we have to zag. Babies get thrown out with bath water.
By contrast, a pilot mindset allows us be more selective and nuanced in how we undo decisions. We are able to tweak and adjust. Consider two different mindsets for a decision:
Definitive mindset:
We are launching initiative ABC to achieve outcome X.
Pilot mindset:
We are piloting initiative ABC. We’ll evaluate our decision at Time T by looking at measure X.
Now suppose Time T arrives, and the results for X are terrible. They weren’t your focus when you started, but you see that other results (Y and Z) are excellent. The data from ABC tell you that you can continue to achieve Y and Z with 30% of the original investment. The same data tell you that improving X might never happen, and would certainly take a lot more money.
What do you think happens in both cases?
Well, this is a real example, where we saw an organization take a definitive mindset. When they got to time T, they continued with ABC, even though the results for X were well below expectation. Y and Z were valuable to the organization, but ABC was supposed to deliver X, so that’s where everyone focused. Then, some months later, ABC was axed entirely, and the organization lost out of the benefit of Y and Z.
We can’t know the counterfactual, but I believe a pilot mindset would have changed the outcome. When they got to Time T, the organization would have been quicker to adjust the investment level and focus on Y and Z. The organization would have viewed ABC as a qualified success and interpreted the poor outcomes with X as valuable learning. ABC would have continued at a lower investment level for the foreseeable future, because Y and Z were both important outcomes for the company.
It’s a common refrain in organizations. We tell definitive stories about the decisions we make. We don’t want the decision to feel reversible. We crave certainty: about our resources and budgets, about our day-to-day activities, about how we’re contributing to the organization. If you’re not well-practiced at taking a pilot mindset, the ambiguity of a reversible decision feels uncomfortable. But that ambiguity is also a blessing. It allows everyone to stay curious about outcomes, and be more open to finding value from unexpected sources.
It’s a small thing, treating decisions as temporary and defining an end date. But the potential effect is outsized: more curiosity and experimentation, more two-way decisions, a more nimble organization. Certainly, it seems worth piloting for the next month or two. 😉
Workomics Staff Picks
Some exciting 2024 news at Workomics is that we’re sponsoring the Rotman Design Challenge. The challenge is a global, annual case competition where students from around the world are given a design challenge, opportunities to workshop their ideas with professional coaches and mentors, and then ultimately present their work to a panel of judges.
As sponsors, we’re busy crafting the challenge the teams will work on over the next two months. The official challenge won’t be released until early February, but in the meantime, here are some of the links we’ve been exploring related to the problem space:
Cal Newport writes about the “hyperactive hive mind,” and how it is problematic as an organizing principle for remote work. I also appreciated his discussion on Harvard Business School’s “Managing the Future of Work” podcast (part 1, part 2)
Most of the challenge participants will be so-called Get Z, so we are super curious to understand the particular needs this generation might have as they enter the workplace. This HBR article gives a nice overview of how events have shaped Get Z, and what some of the implications might be.
One thesis we have is that people are seeking a new compact with their workplace. They want more meaning, more purpose, more focus on social issues that previously weren’t emphasized in the workplace. This BBC article provides a nice summary of some of those themes.
Just for fun, this TV ad out of Australia is hilarious.
I’ll have more to say about the challenge over the next couple of months. For now, we’re just really looking forward to working with the teams and seeing the ideas they come up with.