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3 Irrational Biases You Should Eliminate from Your Organization

Last month I was invited to Las Vegas for a friend’s bachelor party (nice guy but he’s never been big on originality). On the second evening in town I was walking off 6,000 buffet calories at the Bellagio when I noticed a commotion by the roulette tables. A small crowd was gathering around one particular table where the ball had just landed on black for the eighth consecutive time. As I stood there, the next two spins also landed on black.

When the spin ended up on black yet again, I knew the streak couldn’t last forever and placed a $20 chip on red. The ball immediately landed on black again. Undeterred, I decided to double down so I could at least break even. After all, the probability of black hitting again had to be minuscule … right?

Well, not exactly. I never got back to even that weekend.

After returning home with little cash and even less dignity, I did some research and found that I’d fallen victim to the Gambler’s Fallacy, the “mistaken belief that, if something happens more frequently than normal, it will happen less frequently in the future.” In other words, despite the fact that a roulette ball landing on black 13 consecutive times is a rare occurrence, each spin is still an independent event.

I also found that the Gambler’s Fallacy is just one example of what psychologists and behavioral economists have termed cognitive biases. In fact, the study1 of irrational decision making as a result of our brains falling into these logic “traps” has grown considerably since the 1970s. As you might expect, there are practical implications far beyond limiting gambling losses. So, for a special behavioral economics edition, we’ll examine three cognitive biases and how we might minimize their influence.

1) The Planning Fallacy

The Planning Fallacy [1] is the idea that we almost always underestimate the time and cost associated with complex projects. Planners are too optimistic and don’t rely on practical past experiences frequently enough. Examples of the Planning Fallacy in government projects abound (look no further than the $400 billion+ F-35 fighter jet [2])  but are by no means limited to that realm. This bias will sound familiar to management teams juggling a dozen or more complex projects with competing resource needs and tight deadlines.

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Overcoming the Bias

Clear and practical benefit expectations should be agreed upon up front. With the finance team as a strategic partner, a true ROI process [4] that incorporates conservative implementation estimates and “known unknowns” should be mandated. Just as importantly, a look-back process should be carried out where successes and failures can be honestly assessed. Whether it’s a system conversion or process overhaul, transparent objectives and a disciplined approach go a long way.

(Bonus reading: Brooks’ Law [5], the idea that adding resources to a project that’s already behind schedule will make it even later.)

2) Confirmation Bias

If you’ve ever observed someone parse through information until he finds a source that aligns with his pre-existing beliefs, then you know Confirmation Bias [6]. This pitfall is common for bankers who are frustrated with lack of system capabilities and integration.

Confirmation Bias goes something like this:

  1. “This new origination system stinks and has fewer features than our old one.”
  2. Find all of the deficiencies of new loan origination systems and attribute less importance to improvements.
  3. Repeat.

Resulting system changes are often costly while adding little, if any, functionality benefit.

Overcoming the Bias

Beyond an ROI analysis and a disciplined project approach, the inevitable tradeoffs between systems should be assessed up front with brutal honesty. As part of the selection process, sales-oriented PowerPoints from vendors should be 1) kept to a minimum with time spent on actual system use and navigation, and 2) focused on pre-scripted areas of interest. Inviting the incumbent provider to present a “refresh” demo under the same guidelines is a best practice. Finally, involving training resources early in the process to communicate benefits and changes to impacted staff members is key.

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3) Mere-Exposure Effect

This is the theory that “mere repeated exposure of the individual to a stimulus is a sufficient condition for the enhancement of his attitude toward it.” Sound familiar? My colleague Eric Weikart recently wrote [8] that a majority of banks are still using patchwork manual processes to originate big dollar deals. It’s human nature to get comfortable, nostalgic even, about processes even if they’re sometimes painful and time consuming.

The Mere-Exposure Effect is often the culprit (or at least a contributing factor) when stale processes are preserved as part of a new system roll out. With that in mind, the definition of implementation success can’t be merely “flipping the switch.”

Overcoming the Bias

Project teams consisting of subject matter experts and even management trainees should be empowered to drive key process changes to ensure that system functionality and procedures are in sync. And, those teams should also be held accountable. Ongoing, routine (ideally quarterly) tracking of benchmarks remains crucial to enabling fact-based assessments of progress.

Are we going to get every technology decision right? Or every process optimally designed overnight? Of course not. But putting practical building blocks in place to combat our cognitive blind spots is a no-brainer.

-RB

1Two wonderful books on this topic: Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely and Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman.


Ready to bust up some biases?

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Backed by an extensive, exclusive database of peer benchmarking comparisons, Cornerstone Advisors can highlight for your institution potential areas of improvement for performance, increased revenue, and expense reduction.

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