|

|
|
Open Forum
Currently in our Forum section or go
directly to
our discussion area (all discussions):
Selfish Genes Don't Mean Selfish Behavior
March 29, 2006
At the kleptocracy called Enron,
executives built a culture dedicated to stealing from
grandmothers—and they justified it with one of the most
misinterpreted ideas in modern science.
Enron CEO
Jeff Skilling’s favorite book was The Selfish Gene, in
which Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins argued that we
are a product of our genes, and that these genes have
survived by being as ruthlessly competitive as Chicago
gangsters. Dawkins merely meant that the basic business
of a gene is to get as many copies of itself as possible
into the next generation, by whatever means. He has
protested ever since that he never meant to advocate
selfish behavior as the best way to accomplish that.
But Enron
executives latched onto the idea of our innate
selfishness with glee. To be fair, plenty of other
voices also seemed to be advocating selfish behavior.
The economist Milton Friedman was famous for declaring
that "The social responsibility of business is to
increase its profits."
But
Dawkins was a biologist, and he inadvertently provided
business people with reason to think that selfish
behavior was more than a matter of economic convenience.
It was also natural. In Jeff Skilling’s strange
Darwinian interpretation, selfishness was ultimately
good even for the victims, because it weeded out the
losers and forced the survivors to become strong. Think
of all those grandmas getting buried under the rolling
electrical blackouts in California.
Well,
here’s where Skilling went wrong. Genes may be selfish.
But people have evolved to be social. And these days,
the Darwinian view includes an understanding that
cooperation and even altruism are part of our genetic
heritage. It’s true that you can get ahead in the
short-term by being a nasty piece of work. Skilling, for
instance, once got stuck in a traffic jam leaving the
Enron company parking lot. So he pulled into the
opposite lane, and as he whipped past, he flipped the
bird at his own employees. But groups have a knack for
punishing nakedly selfish or antisocial behavior. So
most of us figure out pretty fast that we are more
likely to survive and succeed over the long term when we
learn to control our raging egos and play along with the
group.
And what
about the ones who never figure that out? Sooner or
later, they get a short, sharp lesson in natural
selection: What happened at Enron is a perfect Darwinian
demonstration that people who display raw selfishness
and a blatant disregard for social responsibility
eventually destroy not just their companies, but
themselves.
SAP & The Perils of Imitating Highly Profitable Companies
February
12, 2006
Humans are built to imitate. We actually have mirror neurons in
our brains to help us do what everybody else is doing. That
makes it easier for us to fit in as members of a highly social
species.
The trick is to avoid imitating stupidly, right?
But our natural urge to shun failure and imitate success can be
hazardous, particularly in business.
Let's say a highly successful company reports that it uses
"quality circles," or “job enrichment,” or “total quality
management.” Competing managers hear that and leap to the
conclusion that the company succeeded because of this management
innovation. So they try it, too. A study at Cornell University
demonstrated how imitating "excellence" in this fashion causes
management theories to rise and fall in wildly faddish cycles.
Later, it turns out that the success of the company that started
it all had nothing to do with the big new management idea. The
company may even have succeeded despite the innovation. But
nobody notices. Because of the business obsession with success
stories, managers have already moved on in search of the next
big idea to imitate.
This all comes to mind because of the current ad campaign in
which software maker SAP is actively seeking this kind of blind
imitation. It boasts that customers using its software are 32
percent more profitable than companies that don't.
Blogger Nicholas Carr suspected that this statistic was
misleading and said so. The company that did the research for
SAP issued a huffy reply. Among other things, the CEO who wrote
the letter said that this was clearly "a success by association
Ad campaign. There are no claims in any aspect of the campaign
that imply that the client's success is because of SAP."
But here's what the ad actually says: "The right software can
make any size company more efficient, more agile, more
responsive. In short, make your company more. That's why
companies that run SAP are 32% more profitable than companies
that don't."
Reminded of this wording by Carr, the CEO for the research
company replied, with disarming honesty, "You are correct. I
guess I didn't pay enough attention to the voiceover."
So that 32 percent bragging point? It's one of those statistics
that sound good but mean nothing.
And the moral? Don't just use the part of your brain that's
built to imitate. You're getting paid the big bucks to think
about the hard questions. So ask that high-priced consultant
about the times when his big new idea failed. That's often a lot
more interesting than when it succeeded.
Otherwise, you could end up as just another upper management
sucker, blindly imitating make-believe success stories.
And I got a statistic here that says you will be, let me see
now, 32 percent less profitable.
Why We
Can't Turn Away
December 18, 2005
Have you spent too many hours this year riveted to television
images of people suffering through all our worst nightmares:
Fleeing tidal waves, stumbling out of bombed subway tunnels,
wading past dead bodies in the streets of a great American city?
Why do we watch? Why do get so emotional about people we’ll
never meet? Why do we sit through endless replays of the same
horrific scenes (as if maybe this time it will come out
differently)?
Scientists say we watch partly for
self-preservation: Paying attention to other peoples’ disasters
is a way to keep the same things from happening to us. That’s
one reason we like thrillers and shark-attack movies so much. It
may seem jarring to conflate Hurricane Katrina with, say,
“Jurassic Park.” But both play on biological systems that have
evolved to help us save our own skins.
The explanation starts with the
victims themselves: Let’s say you narrowly escaped the terrorist
bombings in London this summer. “Flashbulb memories” of the
event are probably imprinted on your brain, particularly in the
amygdala, which is your subconscious fear central. If you
encounter some hint of that experience, even years later, the
amygdala’s role is to put you on alert before your conscious
mind suspects that anything is amiss. That way, you have a
better chance of getting out alive.
What’s more surprising is that almost the same response occurs
even in people who merely watched on television. “When you watch
somebody else in a fear learning circumstance,” says New York
University neuroscientist Elizabeth Phelps, “you will have a
reaction in the amygdala as if it’s happening to you.” You feel
their fear, and this fear helps prime your own subconscious
first-alert system in case you ever face a similar crisis.
But our intense interest in
disasters isn’t just a matter of self-preservation. We are also
built to connect with other people and share their emotions:
When someone looks frightened, our eyebrows also rise in fear,
often without our being aware of it. When we see a child’s face
screwed up in anguish, we make the same face, and doing so
actually causes us to feel sorry, too. When we see someone else
in pain, it activates the pain-sensitive regions of our own
brains.
Being on the same emotional page
helped keep families and tribes together during our evolution,
when food was scarce and predators abundant. Groups that didn’t
“click” tended to get a brief, bloody lesson in natural
selection. As a result, empathy, emotional contagion, mirror
neurons, and other mechanisms for social bonding are now built
into our biology. Television simply “grafts onto these innate
systems,” says University of Western Ontario psychologist J.
Phillippe Rushton, “and when we look at people suffering 12,000
miles away, our bodies react in the same way.”
The
Chemistry Of Fear
November 28, 2005
The other day, a colleague in Africa got back to me about an
email request:
Hi Dick
I see that you sent this a few days back. Unfortunately one of
our staff got eaten by a lion so we have been trying to sort the
mess out ...
He wasn’t kidding. Things like that still happen in the African
bush.
But it also wasn’t as far from our own daily experience as it
sounds. Until
a few hundred years ago, we all lived with the threat of
predators. That
forgotten evolutionary experience is still part of our genetic
memory. And every time we walk into a meeting or get up to give
a talk, there’s still a part of us that’s wondering, “Am I going
to get eaten alive here?”
Fear is good, in moderation. It makes us alert to faint hints of
trouble ahead. It tells us when to cross to the other side of
the street. And thus it can keep us alive. On the other hand,
fear can also make us want to close the door and hide under our
desks.
The good news is that we are beginning to figure out how to
control fear. Last week, a new study identified the gene that
produces a protein called stathmin. In mice (and probably also
in humans) stathmin is highly concentrated in the amygdala,
which is the brain’s fear central. Removing the gene makes the
mice a little too bold. They wander out into open spaces where,
in the real world, they would get picked off by predators.
Identifying the gene responsible for this manufactured courage
means that someday soon science may be able to develop drugs to
regulate fear and help people with post-traumatic stress
disorder.
But we don’t have to wait for drugs. Other recent research
suggests that meditation can also reduce the level of innate
fearfulness in the brain. Despite the association with the
contemplative life, meditation apparently makes people better
prepared to take risks and explore new territory. Case in point:
Former CEO Bill George has meditated all his life and in the
1990s, it helped him make Medronics one of the fastest-growing
companies in America.
So, yeah, there are lions out there, and you need to keep your
eyes open. But whistling a happy tune—or meditating a calming
mantra—can help you settle down, focus on the job, and get
through the day in one piece.
An Interview
With Author Richard Conniff
November 2, 2005
1. Your writing for National Geographic and Smithsonian is
mostly about animals. Why a book about workplace behavior?
When I am not tracking animals in the Serengeti or the Amazon, I
often write about people at work: How a supermarket runs, or how
a stage manager brings a new musical to Broadway. I saw enough
of the same behaviors in both worlds to think I could have a
little fun—and also learn some useful lessons.
2. For instance?
Alpha apes and humans often step on subordinates, and the
subordinates often pass it on. It’s called “redirected
aggression,” and it helps you lower your stress hormone level
and recoup your dignity. Unfortunately, it can also poison a
workplace. So you need to recognize that the tendency is
dangerous and take it out on a treadmill or a punching bag
instead.
3. So being the ape in the corner office doesn’t necessarily
mean being brutal?
Some alpha chimps rule by brute force. Others cultivate
subordinates and share the rewards of the hunt. It’s the same
with human bosses. With either type, understanding the
behaviors—simple things like facial expressions, or the biology
of being the righthand man--can help you survive and prosper.
And by the way, talking about animal behaviors, and laughing
about them, is also a good way to get human behaviors out in the
open that you might feel awkward discussing more directly.
4. What's your favorite Ape/manager story?
Leslie Wexner of The Limited once launched a sales campaign
called “Win At Retail” or WAR. He used real battle footage. Then
he strode across the
stage like Patton and admonished his sales reps that “Retail is
war!” And,
good grief, this was at a company that sells women’s lingerie! I
try to get people to see that, even for animals, the war
mentality isn’t the smartest way to succeed.
5.. You write that chimps engage in aggressive encounters 5
percent of the time and more positive interactions 20 percent of
the time. Which way is it going in the workplace?
My book argues that our lives are really about cooperation far
more than conflict; it's just that we're built to pay more
attention to the negative
stuff. Even companies that supposedly hate each other often do
deals
together. Like Sun and Microsoft, or Apple and IBM. Companies
are also starting to recognize that cooperation works better
than conflict with their own employees. For instance, the Gap
recently published a report detailing management abuses in its
Third World factories. Even Wal-Mart claims to be fixing some of
its most notorious work practices.
6. Who are the worst Apes? The best?
How about Jeff Skilling, who flipped the bird at his own
employees and turned Enron into a kleptocracy? Or Hank
Greenberg, who ran AIG on the principle of always taking unfair
advantage? There are plenty of good bosses around, too-- A.G.
Lafley at Procter & Gamble, David Neeleman at
JetBlue. We just notice the bad ones because they’re more of a
threat--and, o.k., more fun to read about.
7. How does gossip fit into the office jungle?
Bosses often have this idea that they can stop employees from
gossiping. Well, they might as well try to teach hippos how to
dance the gavotte. Gossip is human nature. Our primate ancestors
bonded by physically grooming one another. We do it by sharing
the inside skinny with our co-workers. Studies indicate that
gossip is overwhelmingly positive and also 75-95 percent
accurate. So instead of trying to stamp it out, my book explains
how to use it shrewdly.
8. What's the best piece of advice you can offer for a
manager?
Misunderstanding our nature as social animals is the single
biggest mistake you can make. It leads to all kinds of myths
that are epidemic in the workplace—that gossip is bad, that we
succeed by being rugged individualists, that conflict should be
avoided at all costs, that hierarchy is a destructive force. On
the other hand, understanding the biological roots of our
workplace behavior can go straight to the bottom line. In my
book, for instance, I describe how understanding the natural
history of reconciliation saved one American company more than
$75 million in liability costs. That’s something to crow about.
Why Is The Boss Such A
Jerk?
October 14, 2005
It’s time to celebrate—or let’s just say observe—National Boss
Day. It’s this Sunday, October 16, and you’ve gotta wonder if
they picked a Sunday on purpose. In fact, you might be
wondering. Do you have to be a jerk to get to be boss in the
first place? Or does being boss turn you into a jerk after you
get the job? Writer and commentator Richard Conniff says he’s
got some
clues:
Being in charge unbalances the mind a bit. That’s the conclusion
a University of California at Berkeley research team came up
with recently to explain why bosses often behave badly. Getting
power encourages an unihibited focus on rewards--like money,
status and sex—without too much concern for the obstacles, or
for other people.
In one playful experiment, the researchers put three people in a
room and randomly made one of them the boss as the trio worked
through a boring sociological survey.
After a half-hour, a researcher came in and offered the trio a
plate of five cookies. The “boss” almost always took an extra
cookie and often wound up spewing crumbs across the table. Even
random power could apparently make a person "disinhibited.” They
had created …a cookie monster.
Power made President Lyndon Johnson disinhibited too…he received
subordinates while seated on the toilet.
All this fits with other studies suggesting that power can
change an individual’s behavior and biochemistry, down to the
level of serotonin and cortisol.

In fact, a Stanford University study coming out this week looks
at what happens in fish called cichlids, when a low-ranking male
becomes dominant.
The drab, harried underling suddenly turns bright yellow or
blue. He lays on muscle and develops an impressive stripe across
his face, the equivalent of managerial eyebrows. The researchers
don’t say if he also starts acting like a jerk. But they suggest
that there may be parallels, with cellular underpinnings, in the
way humans respond to a change in social status.
O.k., a lot of you bosses are saying, “Hey, I’m no cichlid.” And
no doubt it is possible to become boss and still be decent and
considerate, even when surrounded by fawning subordinates. In
fact, on a personal note, I’d like to say that my boss is a
terrific human being. Way to go, boss. You’re the best.
Comment in our discussion area
Does Looking
Feminine Make You A Loser?
September 29, 2005
|
We all live with facial stereotyping—and also practice it. For
instance, we have evolved as mammals to coo over a baby face.
That’s how nature tricks us into taking care of our kids. When
baby-faced features carry over into adulthood, our innate
response carries over, too. We trust people with big eyes and
chubby cheeks.Go figure. |
 |
 |
But here’s
a
scary side of facial stereotyping: People seem to prefer
masculine features in a leader.
This
may be a genetic predisposition. Or it may just be a bad habit
from being bossed around for 10,000 years by what Carly Fiorina
once called men “with twenty-inch necks and pea-sized brains.”
Either way, the taste for masculine-looking leaders holds true
even when all the potential candidates are women. |
Researcher Anke von Rennenkampff did the study, using two
photographs of each female candidate for a leadership position.
One candidate had a biologically masculine face, the other
biologically feminine. Each candidate was photographed dressed
in a masculine style and also in a feminine style. Guess which
photograph test subjects preferred for the leadership position.
The one promising aspect of the study was that, if the feminine
candidate wanted the leadership job, she could improve her
standing from number four to number two simply by dressing in a
more masculine style. |
Comment in our discussion area
Good News
For Boeing?
September 17, 2005
Duel ... Sorry ... Dual CEOs at Airbus Parent EADS
At EADS, the parent company of Boeing rival Airbus, a brutal
boardroom fight ended in June with the appointment of dual CEOs.
Thomas Enders, a 46-year-old German, and Noel Forgeard, a
58-year-old Frenchman, now share power.
If we can take the struggles for alpha status within chimpanzee
troops as a reasonable precedent, it will not be long before one
of the two CEOs drives the other into exile. And until then,
uncertainty about who's really on top will unsettle the entire
company.
(If you don't buy the chimp precedent, take a look at The Ape In
The Corner Office, pp. 71-72, about the brief bloody period of
joint leadership after Sandy Weill moved in at Citigroup.)
Enders joked about the EADS situation to the Financial Times
(September 14,
2005: http://news.ft.com/cms/s/752c2026-2481-11da-a5d0-00000e2511c8.html
"It would be really funny if guys like Noel and I would say we
love sharing power at the top of the company."
Boeing would probably be laughing all the way to the bank, if
only they could get the apes in their corner office (former CEOs
Phil Condit and Harry C. Stonecipher) to stop groping the help.
A
Messy Brawl At The News Corporation Media Empire
August 17, 2005
Any monkey would recognize what Rupert Murdoch was up to when he
gave his kids top jobs at the company he built. Among baboons
and vervet monkeys, nepotism like that comes naturally.
High-ranking elders routinely interfere at playtime to ensure
that Little Tiffany Baboon and Young Percy Vervet III get their
way.
The new generation thus grows up secure in the habit of
defeating the family ’s subordinates, and the monkey dynasty
gets passed from one generation to the next. And what’s wrong
with a little nepotism? Everybody does it. Bob Dylan’s son is a
hit singer. John Cheever’s kids write books. Descendants of U.S.
Senator Prescott Bush get to live in the White House.
Nepotism evolved as a natural behavior partly because it’s a
shortcut to trust and cooperation. But kids don't necessarily
inherit their parents’ abilities. Let’s talk about work dogs.
Dogs inherit expertise at smelling things, a trait emphasized in
German shepherds by selective breeding. When puppies grow up
with mothers trained in narcotics-detection, 85 percent of them
show an aptitude for the family business. But here’s the
surprising thing: When puppies with the same genetic
predisposition get raised by untrained mothers, only 19 percent
of them show this aptitude. It’s about nurture more than nature.
Children born to the founders of great companies don’t generally
benefit from the kind of selective breeding that’s common with
dogs. And they may not even get raised by the entrepreneurial
parent, but by the divorced spouse. Or by the nanny. So whether
they inherit the right stuff for running a company is a crap
shoot. And yet founding families still play a role in one-third
of S&P 500 companies. Nepotism may still work. A study in the
Journal of Finance found that family-controlled public companies
perform significantly better than non-family companies. But a
recent Harvard Business School study refined this analysis.
Companies where the founder is still in charge do in fact
perform better. But descendants “destroy value,” especially in
the second generation.
One problem with nepotism at any company is that it creates
resentment. Other employees are likely to wonder just what a
buzz-cut, tattoo-wearing thirty-three year old like Lachlan
Murdoch did to earn more than $4 million last year. But the real
problem is that nepotism has no place when you’re playing with
other peoples’ money. News Corp. is a public company, where the
Murdochs own just a fraction of the stock but wield
disproportionate influence. Paying fat salaries to the
founders's kids can look like an abuse of managerial trust.
Rupert Murdoch has built a great company. But that’s no reason
shareholders should let his family monkey around with it for
generations to come.
Postscript
The Wall Street Journal reported on August 25, 2005, that
Lachlan Murdoch got a $5.8 million bonus for 2004, on top of his
handsome salary. Shareholders in the company--and other
employees--must wonder if he earned this because of his
brilliant leadership abilities.
Or was it just his last name?
|
|