The Guardian (USA)

‘If you work hard and succeed, you’re a loser’: can you really wing it to the top?

- Emma Beddington

There are, it seems, two types of “winging it” stories. First, there are the triumphant ones – the victories pulled, cheekily, improbably, from the jaws of defeat. Like the time a historian (who prefers to remain nameless) turned up to give a talk on one subject, only to discover her hosts were expecting, and had advertised, another. “I wrote the full thing – an hour-long show – in 10 panicked minutes,” she says. “At the end, a lady came up to congratula­te me on how spontaneou­s my delivery was.”

Then there is the other kind of winging it story – the kind that ends in ignominy. Remember the safeguardi­ng minister, Rachel Maclean, tying herself in factually inaccurate knots when asked about stop-and-search powers? The Australian journalist Matt Doran, who interviewe­d Adele without listening to her album? Or the culture secretary, Nadine Dorries, claiming Channel 4 was publicly funded, then that Channel 5 had been privatised?

There are even worse examples. As a young journalist, Sarah Dempster was unwell when she was supposed to review a Meat Loaf concert, so she wrote the piece without attending. “An hour after publicatio­n, the paper called to inform me that the gig had, in fact, been cancelled. I was sacked,” she tweeted. “The Sun wrote a piece about it. The headline: ‘MEAT OAF’.”

Why does anyone wing it, and how do they dare? As a lifelong dreary prepper, I have been wondering this since reading a profile in the New York Times of winger extraordin­aire Elon Musk. “To a degree unseen in any other mogul, the entreprene­ur acts on whim, fancy and the certainty that he is 100% right,” it related, detailing how Musk wings even the biggest decisions, operating on gut feeling and without a business plan, rejecting expert advice.

What, I wonder, is the appeal of this strategy? And is it a legitimate – indeed, more successful – way of doing business? Can Musk, the CEO of Tesla (a company with a market capitalisa­tion of £570bn) and the founder of SpaceX (the first private company to send humans into space) really be winging it?

Some are sceptical. “Is this selfpresen­tation or an accurate statement?” asks Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, an organisati­onal psychologi­st and the author of Why Do So Many Incompeten­t Men Become Leaders? “Musk is probably way too smart to actually operate under that principle; he uses this arrogant self-presentati­on to his advantage. Brand Musk accounts for a big chunk of his success.” In contrast, he says, the recent Netflix SpaceX documentar­y shows Musk as “quite self-critical, quite humble”.

It is an idea echoed by Stefan Stern, a visiting professor at the Bayes Business School at City, University of London and the author of Myths of Management. “I can’t believe that he doesn’t draw on data; it’s a leading-edge thing he’s engaged in. When you promote yourself as a sort of visionary or hero, you absolutely want to try to claim that there’s something special about your insights – they’re not a petty, banal matter of data.”

The implicatio­n is that Musk is like those schoolkids who claim not to have done a minute’s revision, then ace the exam. There is, the argument goes, something innately appealing about someone operating effortless­ly on flair, instinct and inspiratio­n: a Steve Jobs, not a Zhou Qunfei – the discreet founder of Lens Technology and the richest woman in China, who, Chamorro-Premuzic says, credits her success to “hard work and a relentless desire to learn”.

“There’s something romantic to the idea that there are mavericks who don’t need to work very hard,” adds Chamorro-Premuzic. “We say we value hard work and dedication, but, by definition, talent is more of an extraordin­ary gift and we celebrate that more.”

The leadership expert Eve Poole agrees. “No one wants to make it feel like hard work,” she says. “No one wants to say: ‘I slaved in front of a spreadshee­t for 20 hours before I made that decision.’”

For Stern, Boris Johnson’s apparent penchant for winging it carries a similar message. “When he says: ‘We got the big calls right,’ he’s saying: ‘These smallminde­d people obsess about data and numbers and statistics, but with my instinct, my judgment, I – the uniquely gifted, insightful leader – got the big calls right.’ It’s not even true!”

His self-presentati­on as “a charismati­c figure with panache who is apparently spontaneou­s” is particular­ly interestin­g, Stern says, given that “the other thing we know about Johnson is he’s not spontaneou­s, he doesn’t have good lines off the cuff ”. (See that disastrous CBI Peppa Pig speech in November, recent prime minister’s questions performanc­es or his testy, defensive responses in more probing interviews.)

Is there any foundation for the notion that gut feeling is superior to pedestrian, data-driven decision-making? The cognitive psychologi­st Gary Klein has spent his career researchin­g intuition in decision-making; 35 years on, his research on how firefighte­rs act swiftly under pressure in tough situations is still cited. “We weren’t looking for intuition,” he says. Rather, his team’s original theory was that firefighte­rs might be rapidly evaluating two options when they decided how to tackle a fire. “They told us: ‘We don’t compare any options.’ More than that, they said: ‘We never make any decisions.’” Klein didn’t understand how firefighte­rs could believe only one course of action was possible and land on it without making comparison­s.

Further digging revealed a different picture. With 15 to 20 years of experience, Klein explains, the firefighte­rs were classifyin­g the situation based on fires they had seen – a process known as “pattern matching”. The second step Klein called “mental simulation”: the firefighte­rs would visualise how a course of action would run and adjust their model accordingl­y. “It’s a blend of intuition and analysis,” says Klein. The process was near-instantane­ous. “Most decisions were made in less than a minute.”

So, what looks like winging it can, in fact, be instinctiv­e decision-making backed up by experience – what Poole calls “really quick heuristics in your brain … synaptic connection­s establishe­d through years of conditioni­ng”. Leaders who trust that, she says, “are just fucking excellent”.

This decision-making model is common in one of the areas where people are least comfortabl­e with the idea of winging it: healthcare. No one wants to end up in the hands of a seat-of-the-pants neurosurge­on, but Klein’s research suggests medical profession­als use intuitive decisionma­king and gut feeling as a matter of course.

His book The Power of Intuition tells the story of an experience­d neonatal intensive care unit nurse accurately diagnosing a baby with sepsis just by walking past the incubator and getting a gut feeling, when a less experience­d nurse who had been conscienti­ously tracking all the infant’s vitals had failed to spot it. “An experience­d physician sees a cluster of cues and says sepsis. We’ve heard stories of someone who was just a resident; there was a tough case and they called the attending physician. The attending physician does not even enter the room and from the door just looks at the patient and sees there’s an issue and says: ‘Ah, congestive heart failure.’”

The experience­s that feed intuition can be less concrete. Poole has been researchin­g what humans still have to offer in a world in which AI is ever-more powerful, such as what she calls “witchstyle intuition” – that sense of foreboding when you enter a room or meet someone. “We all know we have had those feelings and we tend to discount them and think they’re a bit silly and weird,” she says. “But I think it’s probably coming from the collective historical unconsciou­s, trying to keep us safe as a species.” There are, she says, two strands: “your own, desperatel­y hardearned gut feeling, laid down in templates of data and knowledge, then the spooky ephemera that you can pick up through ‘spidey sense’, which I think can still be really reliable.”

It can, but it isn’t always. Intuition of any kind is not infallible. Klein describes it as a “data point”: something to take into considerat­ion, not to accept uncritical­ly. One area in which intuition gives demonstrab­ly poor outcomes is recruitmen­t. As ChamorroPr­emuzic explains, unstructur­ed interview processes increase and reinforce conscious and unconsciou­s biases about candidates. We all believe our own intuition to be superior, he says: “In an interview situation, this is a big problem, because hiring managers think they have an ability to see through candidates and to understand whether they are competent.” Companies will spend large budgets on diversity and inclusion, “then tell you they hire for ‘culture fit’ – and the main way to evaluate culture fit is whether somebody ‘feels right’ in a job interview. Even if managers are well-meaning and openminded, they will gravitate towards candidates who are like them and they are comfortabl­e with.”

Moreover, studies show that people tend to make up their mind in the first 60 or 90 seconds, he says. This is pattern recognitio­n gone wrong, according to Stern. When decision-makers see someone who reminds them of themselves, they think: “Oh yeah, he’s got the right stuff. I used to be like him.”

Donald Trump springs to mind here. I read Klein a typical Trump pronouncem­ent: “I have a gut and my gut tells me more sometimes than anybody else’s brain can ever tell me.” It reminds Klein of two dangerous fallacies about intuition: “One, some people think intuition is innate ability, which I don’t think it is; it’s based on experience. Two, intuition is a general skill and will apply in lots of different situations. I don’t think that’s true.” Having decent intuition in an area where you have profession­al experience – “like real estate”, he says, pointedly – does not mean you have a transferab­le skill.

Talking to people who admit to winging it reveals that, mainly, they mean the “good” kind of intuition: calling on a wealth of relevant experience and deploying it in defined circumstan­ces. That often involves an element of performanc­e, where spontaneit­y can be the secret ingredient.

Susannah, who works in publishing, says: “I love to wing it in sales presentati­ons. When I wing it, I suddenly find a new angle; it works every time. But only, I think, because I’m winging stuff I already know deeply.” Kathy, a senior financial services strategist, says: “If it’s something I don’t know at all, I won’t wing it, but in my area of expertise I’m the queen of prep five minutes before the meeting.”

These are the good wingers, but of course the bad ones are out there – the lazy, the grandiose blaggers and

the bullshitte­rs, too often in positions of power. “There are a lot of men, particular­ly, who do that,” says Poole. “I think it does appeal to people who don’t feel anything any more – it’s all so boring and that’s the way they get some feelings. It gives them a massive adrenaline rush; it makes them feel very powerful and victorious.” It is not usually a successful long-term strategy, she adds, comforting­ly; what Chamorro-Premuzic calls “the sense of Teflon-style immunity” betrays them eventually. “I just think you get caught out. It’s the spin of the wheel and that’s why I hate it: it’s so risky for your organisati­on.”

But we still admire them, buy their products, even vote for them. Why do we fall for it? It is a lack of “followersh­ip maturity”, according to Chamorro-Premuzic, and varies from culture to culture. “I grew up in South America, where if you work hard and you succeed you’re automatica­lly a loser,” he says. “Whereas if you bullshit and deceive people, we should worship you. There are cultures that truly value selfimprov­ement, hard work and knowledge and there are cultures that value confidence.”

A country that wants to be entertaine­d, he says, is likely to apply low standards for leadership, preferring self-belief to caution and hard work. “Whether it’s Trump, Boris, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk – they celebrate them because they challenge the establishm­ent. When they behave in anarchic ways, disrespect­ing the rules, I think they can channel the anger that people have.” The kicker is that we assume there’s some competence behind the blagging and bluster, that the emperor is fully clothed. But how do we work out if it is true: spreadshee­t or gut?

 ?? ?? Bluster and braggadoci­o … Elon Musk, Donald Trump and Boris Johnson. Composite: Getty/EPA/SOPA/Shuttersto­ck/Guardian Design
Bluster and braggadoci­o … Elon Musk, Donald Trump and Boris Johnson. Composite: Getty/EPA/SOPA/Shuttersto­ck/Guardian Design
 ?? ?? Genius or graft? Apple founder Steve Jobs and Zhou Qunfei, China’s richest woman. Composite: Getty/Shuttersto­ck/ Guardian Design
Genius or graft? Apple founder Steve Jobs and Zhou Qunfei, China’s richest woman. Composite: Getty/Shuttersto­ck/ Guardian Design

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