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Cultivating an Unstuck Mind: Four Steps to New Insights
THIRTY YEARS OF RESEARCH and practice have led me to a conclusion that sums up my approach to organizational problem solving: The questions people ask about situations they want to change reveal a lot about what they are thinking and feeling.
This insight about the relationship between what people ask and how they frame a situation has not only informed my approach to working with leaders, it has inspired me to develop a framework for recognizing and avoiding ‘thinking traps’.
In the last several years, I have been collecting the questions leaders ask about situations that have them ‘stuck’. In some cases they are experiencing a persistent and intractable problem; in others they are facing a daunting opportunity and don’t know where to begin. I have found that in most cases, leaders get stuck because they focus their attention — and the attention of their organization — on answering the wrong questions.
Let me start with an example. Imagine a father walking into his teenage daughter’s bathroom and encountering the scene pictured on page 82.
Sadly, I don’t have to imagine the situation, because I am the father who took the picture. Allow me to highlight a few features of the scene: Note that the basin is stained with mascara goo; and a random role of toilet paper is positioned near a dangerously hot electric hair device. Before I go on, let me confess that the daughter who owns the array of toiletries and cosmetics in this photo is now an adult and has moved out of the house. This has become somebody else’s problem.
After the initial emotional reaction, I thought to myself: How can we get our daughter to keep
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