Being part of a team, miscommunications are bound to happen. Jay Papasan recently released an article that is a great reminder about being less critical and more curious about the people we interact with
Seek First to Understand – Hanlon’s Razor
In college, I read Jean-Paul Sartre's celebrated play, No Exit. It’s the story of three people consigned to hell. But instead of flames or torture, they find themselves locked in a room together for eternity. This play is where Sartre famously wrote, L'enfer, c'est les autres... “Hell, is other people.” As a committed introvert, I thought Sartre summed up things nicely.
Luckily, my professor provided some nuance to my interpretation. “Sartre’s hell,” he explained, “is the gap between how we see ourselves and how others see us.” We judge others by their actions without knowing their intentions. Meanwhile, we assess our own actions through the lens of our intentions. We equip ourselves with a shield emblazoned with “I didn’t mean to,” but don’t always offer the same protection to others.
At KW, one of our core beliefs is a commitment to “seek first to understand.” A tool I’ve found useful to live this value is Hanlon’s Razor.* It’s a good rule of thumb for avoiding unnecessary confrontations. It goes like this: “Never prescribe to malice what could also be attributed to stupidity.”
Entrepreneurs move quickly into action and we can be quick to judge, as well. Hanlon’s Razor can help you pause with curiosity, rather than react. If you’re unsure of someone’s motives, ask what happened and get their perspective. Most of the time, people are unaware that they’ve said the wrong thing or acted inappropriately. That’s why I prefer to state it as, “Never prescribe to malice what could be attributed to ignorance.”
When someone cut you off in traffic, most of the time they just didn’t see you. They weren’t playing demolition derby, they were distracted. That email was intended to be cute, not curt. The offer wasn’t a low-ball effort to cheat your seller, they’re just new to real estate and pulled the wrong comps. They were having a bad day, not attempting to ruin yours.
German poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe nailed it when he wrote, “Misunderstandings and neglect create more confusion in this world than trickery and malice. At any rate, the last two are certainly much less frequent.”
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