Increasingly, organizations face pressure to achieve a range of goals, extending well beyond profitability and shareholder value maximization. Many people note the benefits of this broader perspective. Interestingly, though, Dartmouth Professor Pino Audia's work highlights one potential negative effect of defining too many goals as an organization. Here's an excerpt from Kirk Kardashian's feature on the Dartmouth Tuck School of Business website regarding Audia's research:
What does Audia mean by self-enhancement? He argues that many business leaders don't learn effectively from failure because they find ways to convince themselves that they did not fail. They try desperately to maintain their positive self-image in the face of disappointing results. The establishment of a diverse range of objectives facilitates this self-delusion! If many goals have been defined, they might point to the strong performance on a few of those goals, while trying to ignore or downplay poor performance on a range of other objectives. Kardashian writes that, "a key feature of self-enhancing decision makers is that they are cognitively agile in the sense that they change the parameters used to assess performance to reach more favorable assessments." Sadly, this "cognitive agility" means that leaders and organizations don't learn from failure as effectively as they should.
2 comments:
¡Excelente artículo!
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I thoroughly enjoyed reading your blog post on the potential downsides of having too many goals!
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