Why do we get caught by surprise at times? A competitor catches us off guard with an innovative new product launch. A new social trend emerges that shifts consumer tastes substantially. A sudden shift in workforce engagement and employee turnover stuns us. How can we avoid getting surprised by such changes?
Professor Michael Roberto's Blog
Musings about Leadership, Decision Making, and Competitive Strategy
Thursday, March 26, 2026
How Do We Avoid Getting Caught by Surprise?
Why do we get caught by surprise at times? A competitor catches us off guard with an innovative new product launch. A new social trend emerges that shifts consumer tastes substantially. A sudden shift in workforce engagement and employee turnover stuns us. How can we avoid getting surprised by such changes?
Monday, March 09, 2026
What is the Value of an AI-Generated Cover Letter?
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| Source: https://chatmaxima.com/ |
Cover letters used to provide insight to hiring managers and helped them identify which candidates to select for an interview. A well-written cover letter signaled something about the quality of a candidate. Moreover, a well-tailored letter also could signal that a candidate was serious about the particular job opening. Do cover letters still have signaling value in the age of AI?
Monday, March 02, 2026
Have We Failed to Prepare Gen Z Properly for the Workforce?
Have We Failed to Prepare Gen Z Properly for the Workforce? NYU Professor Tessa West tackles this question in today's Wall Street Journal. She argues that many recent college graduates do not have the social skills required to communicate clearly, manage conflict, and respond well to constructive feedback. She argues that they lack these skills for three main reasons:
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Transparency + Clarity: Information Dumps Don't Work
Lately, we hear a great deal about the value of radical transparency. Consultants argue that leaders need to share information broadly with members of their organization. They argue that radical transparency builds buy-in, trust, and commitment. Sounds sensible, right? Is there a downside though? What risks does this approach create?
Friday, February 20, 2026
NASA Issues Investigative Report About Starliner Failure
Sadly, it seems that many of these same challenges led to the problems on the 2024 Starliner mission which left astronauts stranded on the space station for approximately nine months. Yesterday, NASA issued its investigative report on the Starliner failure. Here is the excerpt from the report that caught my attention:
A posture of risk acceptance was communicated by CCP (NASA's Commercial Crew Program) and Boeing leadership, creating division within the large working/joint team and eroded trust. During the mission, CCP and Boeing operational leadership consistently conveyed a position of risk acceptance and readiness to undock, which many perceived as premature and dismissive of unresolved technical concerns. This was particularly apparent regarding the Service Module RCS 138thruster anomalies. This posture gave the impression that completing the sortie mission was prioritized over a thorough assessment of crew safety risks.
One interviewee noted, “People said, ‘Why bother? He’s driving in one direction and that’s what he wants.’”
Some interviewees also mentioned the shuttle operational background of the SMMT Chair, NOM, and CCP PM, and the possible preconceived notion that accepting risk to return the vehicle and crew was the only real path forward. This mirrors decisions made for the shuttle when no safe haven in LEO or alternative return capability was available.
This forward leaning approach led to a breakdown in open dialogue. NASA institutional stakeholders, including ISSP, FOD, and Technical Authorities, felt their input was undervalued or ignored, requiring governance intervention to ensure additional data analysis occurred before a final crew return decision. The perception that CCP leadership had formed a position before hearing all viewpoints created organizational silence, resistance to collaboration, and stagnation in decision making.
Strong personalities within CCP and Boeing were seen as overly optimistic in presenting data, which some interviewees interpreted as lobbying rather than objective analysis. This dynamic discouraged dissenting views and contributed to a growing sense of distrust. As one interviewee described, opposing positions felt like “pushing a rock uphill.”
The situation improved later in the mission when key personnel changes were made within the Boeing team and there was collective recognition that senior leadership should have played a more active role in facilitating respectful engagement across differing perspectives. These changes allowed for more productive conversations regarding the technical qualification campaign of the hardware and testing at the WSTF. The lack of early intervention to address team dysfunction allowed conflict to overshadow mission objectives and delayed consensus on critical decisions.
Organizational silence, discouraging of dissenting views, dismissed technical concerns, overly optimistic analysis... the pattern is clear. Once again, we see ample evidence that leadership did not create a culture in which open and candid dialogue could occur about ambiguous risks. I'm glad to see a careful after-action review taking place here, with transparency about the organizational problems that have been identified (rather than only focusing on the technical problems). Having said that, now the challenge is clear: can NASA turn these lessons into action and fundamentally change the way future programs are led?
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Overestimating What We Know: The Trap of Effortless Search
In her amazing book, Uncertain: The Wisdom and Wonder of Being Unsure, author and journalist Maggie Jackson explores this topic. She writes:
After even a brief online search, information seekers tend to think they know more than they actually do, according to a decade of studies. In one set of five experiments, people were asked to study weighty topics, such as autism or inflation, before taking a quiz on the subject. Half the participants were told to find an online article on the topic, while others were simply given the same information without having to search for it. People who searched online were far more overconfident going into the quiz. In one round, they predicted that, on average, they would get two-thirds of the questions right, although they scored less than 50%.
In contrast, people who had been given the information studied longer, absorbed more, and got about 60% of the questions right - about what they had expected. Rarely if ever in life are just handed information. Searching and seeking are the human condition. But how we do so matters. In the virtual realm, we seem to lose the ability to sense that we don't know, the starting point of discernment. This false confidence blossoms even when people learn nothing from an online search, further studies show. By assuming we can know effortlessly, we close our eyes to our failings and so to chances to explore. We run from the work of fully attuning to the here and now, finding in hubris a retreat from the challenges of facing up to reality as potent as that of outcome-oriented fear.
This research suggests that we need to proceed with caution when we jump to conclusions based on a breezy online search or quick prompt on an AI tool such as ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude. Ask yourself: What do I actually know? How deep and accurate is my knowledge? Should I be making critical decisions based on this superficial knowledge?
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Careful How You Handle Familiar Faces on Your Team
She goes on to give an example of one CEO with whom she worked. She writes, "I coached a CEO who’d brought three former colleagues into a 10-person executive team. Within months, critical decisions were being pre-discussed among “The Four” before formal meetings. The other six leaders became increasingly passive, not because they lacked capability, but because challenging pre-baked decisions felt politically risky."




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