Professor Michael Roberto's Blog
Musings about Leadership, Decision Making, and Competitive Strategy
Tuesday, November 04, 2025
How Quickly Should a Leader Respond to Feedback?
Tuesday, October 28, 2025
What's Good for Our Kids is Great for Us Too!
![]() |
| Source: theladders.com |
If you have not read Jonathan Haidt's amazing book, The Anxious Generation, I highly recommend it. Haidt makes a great case for banning smartphones in schools. Now, many school systems have adopted his advice. Early results suggest that the policies are having a positive impact on learning. I do not allow phones in my university classroom, and I'm confident that removing this distraction improves our dialogue considerably.
Monday, October 20, 2025
Leaders Should Always Consider How Their Team Members Might Answer The Question: “What’s in it for me?”
![]() |
| https://transformpartner.com |
If you don't communicate effectively with your team members during a time of significant change, you will sow confusion and doubt. Some leaders remain silent until they have more clarity themselves and until all the loose ends are tied up. However, a lengthy period of non-communication can be very detrimental to the organization. As Molly Rosen and Connie Rawson write in Fast Company this week, " We see this pattern again and again: silence creates space for confusion. In the absence of clarity, people default to self-protection and assume the worst. The longer the silence lingers, the further they go down the rabbit hole." In fact, your team members will not only be confused, but they will speculate with their peers. They will presume certain intent on your part if you don't explain your rationale.
- What are they worried about losing?
- What might they gain?
- What does this mean for them in the next 30, 60, 90 days?
- What will we be transparent about even if we don’t have all the answers yet?
Wednesday, October 15, 2025
Does Your Boss Know Your Strengths and Help You Pursue New Roles Based on Those Skills?
![]() |
| Source: https://www.skillscaravan.com |
Has one of your former bosses identified your (perhaps previously undiscovered) strengths and helped you pursue new roles that were well-suited to those capabilities? If so, you are very fortunate. The benefits from having such a boss may be significant and long-lasting.
Friday, October 10, 2025
Can Cold Hard Facts Mitigate Overconfidence Bias?
Many people have argued, however, that overconfidence can and should diminish if individuals are exposed to objective performance evaluation data. Is that true? Well, a new paper by Patrick Heck, Daniel Benjamin, Daniel Simons, and Christopher Chabris (published in Psychological Science) questions that conventional wisdom. They studied over 3,000 tournament chess players from 22 countries. In chess, each player has a rating that accurately reflects their probability of winning a contest. In short, chess players have access to objective, accurate performance evaluation data. Yet, overconfidence persists even in the face of cold hard facts! The scholars report:
"On average, participants asserted their ability was 89 Elo rating points higher than their observed ratings indicated—expecting to outscore an equally-rated opponent by 2:1. One year later, only 11.3% of overconfident players achieved their asserted ability rating. Low-rated players overestimated their skill the most and top-rated players were calibrated. Patterns consistent with overconfidence emerged in every sociodemographic subgroup we studied. We conclude that overconfidence persists in tournament chess, a real-world information environment that should be inhospitable to it."
Hubris gets the best of us at times, and it certainly affects business leaders in many situations. My conclusion from this study is that we can't simply expect good outcome measures to mitigate overconfidence bias. Pointing to the facts is not enough. People's emotions matter, and their identity shapes how they will make sense of objective performance data. As we give feedback or evaluate performance, we need to consider the likelihood that distorted perceptions of self-efficacy may not go away just by pointing to the numbers. We have to appeal to people in ways that go beyond the data if we wish to help them reset their self-evaluations and improve based on our feedback.
Tuesday, October 07, 2025
When Should You Launch Your Startup?
![]() |
| Source: Reuters |
Should you launch your startup right after college, or might you benefit from gaining some work experience before becoming an entrepreneur? Recently, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos told Italian Tech Week that gaining work experience is the smarter strategy. He explained, "Go work at a best-practices company somewhere where you can learn a lot of basic fundamental things [like] how to hire really well, how to interview, etc. There’s a lot of stuff you would learn in a great company that will help you, and then there’s still lots of time to start a company after you have absorbed it.” Bezos argues that college dropouts such as Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg are the great exceptions rather than the rule.
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
Teaching Yourself New Ideas & New Skills
Writing in Psychology Today, Carlin Flora explains, "To survive in the knowledge economy, we must all become self-taught learners, whatever our formal training was or will be." Flora explains some of the benefits of teaching ourselves: "The rewards of becoming an autodidact, though, include igniting inner fires, making new connections to knowledge and skills you already have, advancing in your career, meeting kindred spirits, and cultivating an overall zest for life and its riches."
Being self-taught doesn't mean we don't attend workshops, watch YouTube tutorials, or listen to experts at a conference. However, it does mean organizing our own learning journey, and not relying solely on the passive process of listening to others explain something to us. We have to read voraciously, find opportunities to practice new skills, and experiment with new methods and techniques.
I must admit that I don't love being a novice at something. Author James Marcus Bach explains that, for many people, "feelings of inadequacy stop curiosity." Yet, curiosity is at the heart of learning. While teachers hopefully fostered our curiosity as students, we need to cultivate our own curiosity as adult learners. We need to take the time to ask interesting questions, acknowledge what we don't know, and seek out sources of new information. In many cases, we won't truly learn something new in a 60-second video. It will take sustained attention and the reduction of distraction. Finding the time to focus will be key if we wish to become more proficient at teaching ourselves something new.







