The questions include those the leaders should ask themselves and questions they should use to challenge the people proposing a course of action.
Here are some of the recommended questions:
- Is there any reason to suspect the team making the recommendation is motivated by self-interest?
- Has the team fallen in love with its proposal?
- Were the dissenting options within the team explored adequately?
- Are credible alternatives included along with the recommendation?
- Are the recommenders overly attached to a history of past decisions?
- Is the recommending team overly cautious?
- Where did the worst case scenario come from?
- How sensitive is the recommendation to our competitors' responses?
- What could happen that we have not thought of?
- Review proposals to spot overoptimism.
- Be cautious of an absence of dissent in a team addressing a complex problem.
- As a good practice, insist that the team submit at least one or two alternatives to the main recommendation and explain their pros and cons.
- Consider all recommendations as if you were a new CEO at your company.
- When considering new investments, disregard past expenditures that don't affect future costs or revenues.
- Don't influence a team's proposals by choosing team members whose opinions are already known.
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