Posts Tagged ‘Halo Effect’

Rereading “The Halo Effect” and Thinking About Open Government

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

As I read about the plans for implementing Open Government, I decided that I needed to reread The Halo Effect … and the Eight Other Business Delusions That Deceive Managers.  Not because I am dismissive of open government but because I want it to succeed.  And one way of ensuring success is to make sure the plans don’t fall victim to these management delusions:

  • The Halo Effect – Attributing organizational success to unrelated factors such as leadership, strategy, workplace motivation, etc.
  • Delusion of Absolute Performance – Seeing success as absolute rather than if the organization is doing better than its competitors.
  • Delusion of Rigorous Research – Confusing the quantity of research with the quality of research.
  • Delusion of the Single Explanation – One factor completely explains success or failure.
  • Delusion of Correlation and Causation – This should be a familiar one.
  • Delusion of Connecting the Winning Dots – Basing a sample only on outcomes such as only studying successful companies.
  • Delusion of Lasting Success – No company is successful in every business environment.
  • Delusion of the Wrong End of the Stick – Confusing cause and effect.
  • Delusion of Organizational Physics – Companies and the people who inhabit them are not easily predictable and the complexity inherit in their relationships makes them hard to study.