Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor...

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Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business Oklahoma State University [email protected] www.andrewurich.com

Transcript of Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor...

Page 1: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical ThinkingLeading Innovation and Value Creation

Andrew L. Urich, J.D.

Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies

Spears School of BusinessOklahoma State University

[email protected]

Page 2: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

What Happened to GM?

Page 3: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

GM History

1950’s - Half of all cars in the US

Page 4: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

GM History 1980 - 853,000 to 284,000

worldwide

Page 5: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

1999 “The most versatile vehicle on earth”“Lifestyle support vehicle”

Page 6: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

1999 “The most versatile vehicle on earth”“Lifestyle support vehicle”

Page 7: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

1999 “The most versatile vehicle on earth”“Lifestyle support vehicle”

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1st Q 2009Passenger cars

Toyota 19.4% GM 15% Honda 12.4% Nissan 10.2% Ford 10.0% Hyundai 6.2% Chrysler 5.2% Mazda 3.4% BMW 3.2% VW 3.2% Kia 2.6% Subaru 2.6%

Volvo 0.8% Saab 0.2%

Page 9: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical ThinkingDon’t try this at home!

I prefer being given the correct answers rather than figuring them out myself.

I don't like to think a lot about my decisions as I rely only on gut feelings.

I don't usually review the mistakes I have made.

I don't like to be criticized.

Page 10: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

What is Critical Thinking?

1. Making decisions and taking action based on reason, evidence and analysis.

2. Detect and avoid thinking traps.

3. Reflect on the justification of one's own beliefs and values.

4. Understand the logical connections between ideas.

5. Metacognition: thinking about thinking.

Page 11: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

What is Critical Thinking?

Using your brain to create value for yourself and your organization!

Value Superior analysis and judgment Intelligent decision making Focus on what matters Identify drivers of value Face reality

Page 12: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Value FocusJD Power Top 10 Reliability

2004 2007 Buick145 Porsche 110 Lexus 145 Lincoln 114 Cadillac 162 Buick 115 Mercury 168 Lexus 115 Honda 169 Mercury 121 Toyota 178 Toyota 128 BMW 182 Honda 132 Lincoln 182 Ford 141 Subaru 192 Mercedes 142 Jaguar 197

2004 2007 Buick145 Porsche 110 Lexus 145 Lincoln 114 Cadillac 162 Buick 115 Mercury 168 Lexus 115 Honda 169 Mercury 121 Toyota 178 Toyota 128 BMW 182 Honda 132 Lincoln 182 Ford 141 Subaru 192 Mercedes 142 Jaguar 197

2004 2007 Buick145 Porsche 110 Lexus 145 Lincoln 114 Cadillac 162 Buick 115 Mercury 168 Lexus 115 Honda 169 Mercury 121 Toyota 178 Toyota 128 BMW 182 Honda 132 Lincoln 182 Ford 141 Subaru 192 Mercedes 142 Jaguar 197

2004 2007 Buick145 Porsche 110 Lexus 145 Lincoln 114 Cadillac 162 Buick 115 Mercury 168 Lexus 115 Honda 169 Mercury 121 Toyota 178 Toyota 128 BMW 182 Honda 132 Lincoln 182 Ford 141 Subaru 192 Mercedes 142 Jaguar 197 Acura 143

Page 13: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Value Focus

BMW “We don’t make automobiles [we make] moving works of art that express the drivers love of quality.”

GM: Car guys and bean counters– no marketing

Page 14: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Value FocusLoss of Trust & Respect

Trust Issues Consumers Dealers Workers Beat up suppliers Banks, Public opinion Shareholders - Bondholders

Truth irrelevant when trust doesn’t exist

Page 15: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Value FocusLoss of Trust & Respect

Loss of commitment Playing favorites Keep you head down and get along Stop working start having meetings

(Sr. VP of Nothing) Lack of Fun

Innovation Creativity

Page 16: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Lack of Diverse Opinion(Face Reality)

Group think Stability over conflict Continuity over disorder Status quo over change

50 year old decision making structure Conformity over rebellion

Same design centers Run off renegades

De Lorean fired at GM -- Iacocca fired at Ford

Page 17: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Market Value versus Cumulated Strategic Investments at General Motors

1980 GM = $13 Billion

1980-1997 $167 Billion or $332 BillionR&D and capital spending

1997 GM = 40 Billion

Page 18: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Ross Perot on the Subject From 1980 to 1985 GM spent $45 billion in

capital investments but only increased worldwide market share by 1%.......

"For the same amount of money, we could buy Toyota and Nissan outright, instantly increasing market share to 40%.”

Gorilla dust

Page 19: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Optimistic IllusionsAsk Rick Wagoner why GM isn’t more like Toyota. (69/70)

“We’re playing our own game – taking advantage of our own unique heritage and strengths.”

Page 20: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Distortion of RealityLet’s ignore gas mileage

Page 21: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Distortion of RealityNo money in small cars

Page 22: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Who’s Reality Bob Lutz

Global warming “is a total crock of [expletive].”

“Hybrids like the Toyota Prius make no economic sense.”

Page 23: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Strategic ThinkingThe key to strategy is what you don’t do

Page 24: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Strategic ThinkingJapan has robots we need robots

Page 25: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Sequel: Fuel Cell 9/2006 Due 2010

“Leapfrog the Japanese” “A Game Changer”

Page 26: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Volt: Electric Car 12/2006

“A game changer” “Beat the Japanese at their own

game”

Page 27: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Bureaucracy & the Status Quo Risk taker to Risk avoidance Cash poor to Cash comfortable Contribution to Playing favorites Opportunities to Problems Marketing & sales to Finance & bean-counting Momentum to Inertia Working to Meetings END

Page 28: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Does Bureaucracy Materialize Out of Nowhere?

Page 29: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Applications

Have you clarified exactly how you create value for Chesapeake?

Focus on value creation and avoid activities that are not central to your strategy.

Appreciate and seek diverse (and contrarian) points of view

A fun and exciting atmosphere fosters creativity and productivity

Rage against bureaucracy and the status quo.

Page 30: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

ApplicationsManagement Issues

Leader sets the tone Processes often get in the way Bloomberg abolished titles Conflict breeds creativity Presentations– one-way

communication Promote and reward risk taking and

attempts at innovation

Page 31: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

ApplicationsJack Welch Bureaucracy Busting

Be relentless and outrageous Celebrate impassioned

boundaryless people Love the people who hate meetings Encourage managers to swing for

the fences Create a culture of excitement END

Page 32: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.”

President of world’s second largest computer

company (DEC) arguing against the PC in 1977

Page 33: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“The world potential market for copying machines is 5000.”

IBM turning down the eventual creators of Xerox

Page 34: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“I think there is a world market of about five computers.”

Founder of IBM in 1943

Page 35: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?”

Warner of Warner Brothers arguing against the need to add sound to silent movies

Page 36: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

Obama and McCain spent $1 Billion on their 2008 campaigns – Absurd?

Coca-Cola spent almost $2 billion trying to get us to drink sugar water in 2008.

Page 37: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote.”

President Grover Cleveland, 1905

Page 38: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“We don’t like their music and guitar music is on the way out anyway.”

Decca record executive turning down the Beatles, 1962

Page 39: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“Television won’t last because eventually people will get tired of staring at a plywood box every night.”

Daryl Zanuck, 20th Century Fox Movie Producer, 1946

Page 40: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical Thinking

“Everything that can be invented has been invented.”

Commissioner of US Patent Office arguing to President McKinley to close down the Patent Office in 1899

Page 41: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Why Don’t They Give Us an Owner’s Manual For Our Brain?

Page 42: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Brain’s Inner WorkingsThe Wiring 100,000,000,000 neurons (brain cells)

15,000 synaptic connections each

By age 15 half are gone and the superhighways are up and running.

These mental pathways become the filter–producing recurring patterns of thinking, feeling and behavior.

Examples: Empathy–confrontation–authoritarian–dogmatic–emotions–tolerance for uncertainty.

Page 43: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Brain’s Inner WorkingsThe Parts The brain is full of zero sum games

Ever find yourself feeling conflicted? Competing modules MRI research on picturing yourself as old

Stanford study No payments until 2010 Disagree– brain off Agree-- pleasure

Parts of the brain Amygdale-fear responses

Fleeing the stock market like you are fleeing a lion Prefrontal cortex – recently evolved – controls voluntary

actions Logical and analytical

Limbic system - oldest physical part of the brain The rat brain – Impulses gut reactions

Page 44: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Amygdale: Fear Responses Total US Stock Market

1982 value = $1.2 Trillion Return 1982 to 2007 13.3% Theoretical 2007 value $28.2 Trillion Actual value $18.7 Trillion Lost to market timing $9.5 Trillion

NASDAQ 9.6% Return 1973 – 2002 4.3% Actual average return to NASDAQ

investor

Zweig, Jason, Money Magazine, December 2007, page 76

Page 45: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Your Strength Strength is a recurring pattern of

thought, feeling, or behavior that can be productively applied.

Strength is more important than experience, brainpower, and willpower.

You cannot teach strength.

Page 46: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Your Strength

What to notice, what to ignore What to love, what to hate Your motivations, ego, altruism How you think - practical or

strategic Your attitude - optimistic or cynical Your filter is your Strength

Page 47: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Strength of Great Accountants

Innate love of precision

Happiest moment is when the books balance

Gallup survey

Page 48: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Using Your BrainYour Unique Strength + Critical Thinking = Success

Your value and ability to prosper and reach your goals come from:“sensing, judging, creating, and building

relationships.” Thomas Stewart, Intellectual Capital

We all have the same information – it’s what you do with it that counts.

Page 49: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Punch-line Early in life we get theories of the world

– the theories make sense – but making sense is not the same as being correct.

Beware of your Brain’s wiring! Your brain is programmed

Page 50: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

ApplicationsUsing Your Brain

Exploit your strength! Don’t correct weaknesses, work around them. Skills and knowledge can be taught, Strength

cannot. Here’s what we can change!

Core beliefs New skills and knowledge Your values Self-awareness Capacity for self-regulation Hidden strengths

Page 51: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

“Our minds are like inmates, captive to our biology, unless we manage a cunning escape.”

Nassim Taleb The Black Swan

Page 52: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Why is Charlie Sheen an Actor?

Page 53: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Why Do We Do What We Do?Albert Einstein

“Fear or stupidity has always been the basis of most human action.”

Worst paper ever….

“People have two legs, animals have four, except fish which have none.”

Page 54: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Basis of Human Action and Decision Making?

Beliefs Act out your beliefs Desires Pursue your desires

Instinct Succumb to instinct

Page 55: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

BeliefsYou act out what you believe? I believe the world is a dangerous

place. I believe people should______. I am skeptical of all claims. An “ideal” manager does ______. The best investment philosophy

is___.

Page 56: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

BeliefsFilters and Reinforcements

Page 57: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Desires Cialdini knows where our desires

come from Are we honest about our desires?

Mark Cuban and flattery

Desire to feel good Desire to feel safe

I have to scare you first. First I create the disease – then I

create the cure.

Page 58: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Living by Instinct“Nature, Mr. Allnut, is what we are put in this world to rise above”

Rose Thayer (Katherine Hepburn) The African Queen

Human Animals – Instinct…...................Human Beings – Critical Thinking Wealth/Greed................................... Altruism and charity Seek security at all cost....................Get out of your comfort zone Preserve status quo..........................Change Meeting society’s expectations...........Be authentic to yourself

(following the herd).......................... (think for yourself) Traditional gender roles.................... Equality of the sexes Tribalism (nationalism)..................... Multi-culturalism Praise authority................................ Question authority Praise and follow the leader.............. I don’t need a leader Consistency is safe............................Strive for improvement Guided by personal experience...........Critical thinking Freewill???........................................Free Will!!!!! Surviving........................................Living

Page 59: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Basis of Human Action and Decision Making? Beliefs, Desires & Instinct

You do what you feel obligated to do.

You do what is the easiest. You do what makes you feel safe. You do what you’ve always done.

Page 60: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

You Might Be Thinking Critically If…..

You change a core belief. You get outside your comfort zone. You admit you were wrong about

something important. You increase your self-awareness. You do something you wouldn’t do.

What if I like what I do?

Page 61: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Do We Always Think the Same Way?Did GM Think About This?

Global Product Development Tom Stephens, who runs the company's power-train unit Carl-Peter Forster London, Germany and Greece BMW, Opel

Page 62: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Requirements of Critical Thinking

1. Awareness of choices and real consequences

2. Self-awareness

3. Value focused proactive mindset

4. Avoid thinking pitfalls

Page 63: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

1. Awareness of Choices and Real Consequences

If you choose one of 10 known options when there are, in fact, more than 100 options, have you really exercised critical thinking?

Cognitive bias: Ignoring alternatives

Page 64: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Junkfinger Test Tattoos

Traffic tickets

Brushes with the law

Being sick

Promptness

Pets

Page 65: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

If You Don’t Want to Fall in the Grand Canyon--Don’t Go to Arizona

What I do today affects what happens

tomorrow.

Page 66: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Junkfinger TestIn the Business World

Inconsistency

Excuses

Making enemies at work

Always talking, never listening

Accept things as they are

Acting uninterested – not engaged

Lose credibility

Page 67: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Goldfinger

Behavior and attitude that put you in a position for good things to happen:

1. ?2. ?3. ?4. ?5. ?

Page 68: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Most people end up where their behavior indicates they want to be.

Page 69: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

2. Self-awarenessMetacognition

“The truth will set you free……….but first it will piss you off.”

Werner Erhard, founder, est Training

“The greatest of all faults, I should say, is to be conscious of none.”

Thomas Carlyle (1795 – 1881) Scottish writer

Page 70: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

3. Value Focused Proactive Mindset

Life philosophies down 50%

Man may be wired for meaning

“Consider first the end.” Leonardo da Vinci

Page 71: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

What Do You Really Want? Be proactive (3 kinds of people)

Do most people suppress their personalities and their dreams?

Picture your 70th birthday

Reeboks says “Life’s short– Play hard.”

I say “Life’s long– Do something.”

Page 72: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Value CreationGoals and Goal Setting

What do I really want?

How do I set effective goals?

How do I increase the likelihood of good things happening and reduce the likelihood of bad things happening?

Page 73: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Trick to Setting Effective Goals Worry about the means not the

end.

In other words, set goals that are within your control that can lead to good things– as opposed to outcome based goals.

Page 74: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

End based goal:Impress the boss/Get

promoted

Act with enthusiasm, show your passion and demonstrate self-confidence

Don’t just do what you’re told– Develop the habit of doing things impressively

Identify the prototype employee and emulate that person

Professional Image Program

PRO-ACTIVITY HOUR: Spend one hour a week planning and reflecting on how success is measured and why certain people are favored

Page 75: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Ends based goal:Be a millionaire/Retire

early

Study investing and business opportunities for three hours a week

Draft a budget and stick to it

Figure out what “matters” and do the those things first

Get two jobs

Page 76: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Ends based goal: Vice president by age

35 Arrange four networking lunches per month

Volunteer for high profile/difficult projects

Find a mentor and stay connected

Try and make every co-worker/client into a friend and supporter

Page 77: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

End based goal:Find a good spouse

Put yourself in places where “good spouses” hang out

Don’t date losers while you’re waiting for a winner

Project the image that attracts “good spouses”

Be proactive not passive

Page 78: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Priorities of ManagementAndy Roddick

Work Hard Have fun Be a good teammate Learn from mistakes Win

Page 79: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

4. Thinking Pitfalls

Critical Thinking vs. Traditional Thinking

Page 80: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Cannot Predict the Futurevs.

Spreadsheets and Models Predict Future

Late 70s Energy Crisis

Early 80s Latin American Bank Defaults

Mid 80s Junk Bonds, Michael Milken

Late 80s S&L Crisis

Mid 90s Derivatives crisis

Late 90s Dot-Com Collapse

2000 Long-Term Capital Management

2008 Sub-prime Mortgage Debacle

Before 2015 Unexpected disaster

Page 81: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Cannot Predict Probability vs.

Theory Predicts Probability

“Most negatives in housing are behind us.”

Alan Greenspan, October 2006

Page 82: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Cannot Predict Probability vs.

Theory Predicts Probability

“I don’t see (sub-prime mortgages) imposing a serious problem.”

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, April 2007

Page 83: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Cannot Predict Probability vs.

Theory Predicts Probability

“We see no serious broader spillover to banks from the sub-prime market.”

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, October 2007

Page 84: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Cannot Predict Probability vs.

Theory Predicts Probability

“The effective management of risk is one of the core strengths that has made Lehman Brothers so successful.”

Still found on Lehman Brothers website one month after collapse.

Page 85: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Focus on Unknown Unknowns vs.

Focus on the Known

Risk Management - Mirage Hotel in Vegas Hundreds of Millions on

Cheating Detection Employee Monitoring Probability and Diversification Theft Protection

Four biggest losses: Tiger attacks Siegfried or Roy Contractor wires hotel with dynamite Forms not turned in to IRS Owner’s child kidnapped

Page 86: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Source: 2006 Report to the Nation on Occupational and Fraud Abuse by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE)

Focus on Unknown Unknowns vs.

Focus on the Known

Page 87: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Observation to Theory vs.

Theory to Practice

Coin flips heads 50 times in a row--what are the odds tails comes up next?

Ideology = Tails is due

Scientific probability theory = 50/50

Critical Thinking = Crooked coin

Page 88: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Embrace Uncertainty and Ambiguity vs.

Must Have an Answer or Explanation

Underestimate the role of luck in life

Overestimate it in games of chance

Think we can measure it in decision-making

Page 89: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Thinking vs.

Computing

The energy conferences

Dot-com’s new world

Page 90: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Harmful Mental ShortcutsHeuristics

“Everything in life should be made as simple

as possible, but not simpler.”Albert Einstein

Simplifying information processing–simple explanations are the easiest.

As the world gets more complex, we seek refuge in simplicity.

Page 91: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Harmful Mental Shortcuts

Things that are scarce are good.

You can rely on authority figures.

Confident people know what they are doing.

The more similarities a person has to me the more I can rely on them.

Page 92: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Harmful Mental Shortcuts

Experts know what they are talking about.

Price = Value.

Items on special are a good deal.

The person in charge is responsible for the outcome.

If everyone’s doing it, it must be good or right.

Page 93: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Applications Recognize and appreciate randomness, uncertainty and

ambiguity. Develop a more realistic understanding of the inability

to quantify and measure risk. Think! Don’t compute. Recognize the risk of thinking you know…what you

don’t know. Pursue ventures with limited risk/cost and tremendous

upside potential. Look out for pitfalls and cognitive biases

Page 94: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical ThinkingApplications

Awareness keeps your brain on track Question your beliefs and assumptions Be honest about your desires

Struggle to think critically Lifelong learning Put yourself in positions for good things to

happen Set goals and make things happen Doubt and wonder

Page 95: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Secret to Happiness

Page 96: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Secret to Happiness

Self-delusion

Hypocrisy

Ignorance

Page 97: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Secret to Happiness

Ignorance is Bliss“People who do things badly are supremely

confident in their abilities—more confident, in fact,

than people who do things well. Not only do they

reach erroneous conclusions and make

unfortunate choices, but their incompetence robs

them of the ability to realize it.”

Dunning, David Journal of Personality and Social Psychology December 1999.

Page 98: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

The Secret to Happiness

Why?

Researchers believe that the same skills

required for competency are the same to recognize

incompetence.

Page 99: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Critical ThinkingImagine

“Imagination is more important than

knowledge.”

Einstein

“The reasonable man (woman) adapts himself to the world. The unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on unreasonable men (women).”

George Bernard Shaw

Page 100: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

Thank You

I appreciate your time and attention.

[email protected]

www.andrewurich.com

Page 101: Critical Thinking Leading Innovation and Value Creation Andrew L. Urich, J.D. Puterbaugh Professor of Ethics & Legal Studies Spears School of Business.

References

Ailes, Roger. You Are the Message. New York. Doubleday, 1988. Bazerman, Max H. Smart Money Decisions, Wiley & Sons, 1999 Buckingham, Marcus, First, Break All the Rules, Simon & Schuster, 1999. Cialdini, Robert B. Influence: Science and Practice. 3rd Ed. New York:

Harper Collins, 1993. Ghemawat, Pankaj, Strategy the Business Landscape, Addison Wesley,

NY 1999. Golman, Daniel, Emotional Intelligence, Bantam Books, New York, 1995. Hirshberg, Jerry, (Founder Nissan Design International) The Creative

Priority, Harper Business, NY, 1999 Koch, Charles G., The Science of Success, Wiley & Sons, 2007. Lakoff, George, Moral Politics, Paul, Richard. Critical Thinking. Santa Rosa, CA: Foundation for Critical

Thinking, 1993. Pink, Daniel H. The Whole New Mind, Riverhead Books, NY, 2006. Schramm, Carl J. The Entrepreneurial Imperative (HarperCollins) 2006.