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Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

Tags: Confidence, Performance Management, Tools & Techniques, Leadership, Real Estate, Mergers & Acquisitions, Human Resources, Workforce Management, Management, Business Operations, Investment, Finance, Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Managing, Managing a Team, Overconfidence, Economy, Downturn, Recession, Andrew Tilin

Scholars, business leaders, scientists, and the dictionary all have their own nuanced definitions of the word. Rosabeth Moss Kanter, the celebrated Harvard Business School professor and author of Confidence: How Winning Streaks & Losing Streaks Begin & End, offered a pithy and useful definition when she wrote that confidence is “the expectation of positive outcomes.” This is a great way to conduct business, of course, but most of us know that living by these words is a difficult practice. Confidence is a complex quality that plays tricks on us, which is why we sometimes lack confidence when we shouldn’t, or become overconfident at times when we should show some humility. In short, maintaining confidence takes work.

In good times: Confidence swells.

We all know what happens when the economy hums: A lot of what businesspeople try works. AIG discovers a profitable market in insuring dicey securities. General Motors sells lots of gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles. Innovation and entrepreneurialism flourish because the odds of success rise. And confidence climbs higher — often, as we can now see so clearly, dangerously high. “There’s evidence that in good times, suddenly everyone thinks that they’re better than everyone else,” says Don Moore, an associate professor of organizational behavior and theory at Carnegie Mellon’s Tepper School of Business. “On average, that’s just not true.”

Our problem? We can’t easily view our achievements with anything approaching objectivity. In a study on confidence published last year, Moore gave participants 18 computer-based trivia quizzes and then asked them how well they did. Turns out, most were horrible at assessing their performances — about 90 percent of the subjects guessed wrong about how they did.

Hubris and delusion, as you might imagine, are a dangerous combination. When things are going gangbusters, the truth is we get too full of ourselves. Our confidence has us looking at our businesses through rose-colored lenses.

In stable times: Overconfidence dictates.

When business is OK but unspectacular, we get conservative. We lean on practices that served us well during the earlier boom. Our confidence lies in the fact that we know what works, and we stick with it.

But that confidence can lead us astray again, as we adopt the false belief that experience can replace effort. Veteran cops do this: Moore cites well-known research in which seasoned policemen frequently erred in determining whether or not suspects were telling the truth. The related study, titled “Who Can Catch a Liar,” proves that few folks really can. Experience, it turns out, counts for little. “If I teach the same class for 10 years and start failing to prepare, then my performance suffers,” Moore says. “You have to find that sweet spot: sufficient poise to work with what you’ve already got, and sufficient anxiety to invest time and energy into your work.”

In downturns: Confidence evaporates.

Here’s where we are now. The economy has tanked. People are paying off mortgages worth far more than their homes; folks are out of work. Those still on the job, including company management, walk around office hallways with their heads down, in part because they fear becoming the next casualty.

Again, Moore says that confidence — really, the lack thereof — is misleading, slightly out of whack with reality. Yes, the national unemployment rate is a sobering 8.5 percent, but that means the employment rate is still 91.5 percent. Real estate is cheap, certainly compared with a few years ago, when those looking for homes bemoaned the sky-high prices. Weaker businesses are ripe for acquisition.

You have to look at the proverbial glass as half-full. “These days, I bet there are a lot of managers imagining that they’re not doing well, and that others are doing better,” says Moore. “On average? That’s untrue.”

Confidence experts say that in these stressful times, leaders need to be level-headed and courageous. Be brutally honest with yourself and others, and get comfortable with making changes and even going against the grain. Marriott, for instance, recently took what could be viewed as a leap of faith when it agreed to buy West Virginia’s iconic and bankrupt Greenbrier resort. In the long run, the hotel’s estimated $130 million price tag could very well represent a bargain. “This is a time to do things even if you don’t want to do them,” says Marina Gorbis, who runs the Institute for the Future, a Silicon Valley think tank. “This is a time for heroic actions.”

 
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  •  
    1

    swati1975

    04/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    confidence: is the balance between underconfidence when u r growing and overconfidence when u have grown enough or u r nothing.

  •  
    2

    nosamg

    04/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    A well articulated article. To the final point, I would add that a critical part of being brutally honest is not accepting any form of conventional wisdom about one's business. I'm in an industry that seems to change every 10 minutes, but don't all industries feel similar these days. What's most important is constantly asking the value questions? Do my products/services deliverable tangible and demonstrable value? What is my sustainable competitive advantage in delivering said value? What is my roadmap to enhance this value proposition? Etc.


  •  
    3

    poultonm

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Confidence, the sign of any good leader, has to be tempered by prudence. Like the fine line between madness and genius, the fine line between hubris and confidence has to be modified by good sense and optimism.

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    4

    dave.edwards@...

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I haven't read Miss Kantor's book but I think she is off on her definition of confidence. The expectation of positive outcomes can just as easily be delusional - which would help explain the vicious cycles she experiences. Confidence, self-esteem, and a host of other things all make up attitude. I don't see confidence as something as flighty as positive outcomes but more solidly founded in one being prepared to handle any kind of outcome - that leads to confidence. It requires knowledge and experience applied to each situation and knowing you can manage it.

  •  
    5

    annmariesmart

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    An amazing article, the flip of which is clear, that managing the art of confidence, filters into managing the art of success.

  •  
    6

    david_csa

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    Confidence: An Alternate Definition wink

    "Confidence," I once read, "is the feeling you had before you truly understood the problem."

    But that last quote from Marina Gorbis kicked butt. I'm going to tape it to my mirror. ?This is a time to do things even if you don?t want to do them. This is a time for heroic actions.?

  •  
    7

    bdbarbera

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I believe the commentor above is correct when he says that the expectation of positive outcomes can be delusional. However, we should not discount such beliefs as "flighty." Thoughts and expectations can have extremely powerful effects on performance.

    Until Roger Bannister ran a mile in under four minutes, many believed such a feat to be impossible. Once it was proven possible, others quickly followed. Vasily Alexeev, a Soviet weight lifting champion of the 1970's, was the first to break the weight lifting barrier of 500 pounds. Yet before he could do it, Alexeev's trainers changed his limiting belief by lying to him, and setting up 501.5 pounds of weights to look like 499, which Alexeev had already done on several previous occasions. The history of science and industry is also replete with such examples, in which the belief that something is impossible holds back progress, until someone breaks through, and suddenly a host of others follow.

    Confident leaders must break through sociallly-imposed barriers to inspire confidence in others, which is the genesis of true progress. Whether you call this "knowing you can manage it" or "expectations of positive outcomes," it is an imperative to success.

  •  
    8

    jsargent

    04/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I believe what many so-called confident people have is actually arrogance.

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    9

    amitsharmabang

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Must say a good article for a bad day....
    The Vicious cycle is surely gona take you for a ride, it will always leave you thinking twice before doing anything. This could be a good idea to think twice and do it, but if you keep thinking then when are you going to do it.

    it is very well stated that this is the right time to do what you always wanted to do.

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    10

    momina

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    great article. they should focus more on being level headed than overly confident in business schools. i believe that would help the level-headedness.

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    11

    Ian P

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I am definitely with the NLP gurus on this one, As with luck, you make your own confidence levels.
    As an inveterate Brit I am a natural pessimist. "It will either rain or go dark before midnight - so take your umbrella" This builds a tendency to always stay in the safe rut, to prepare for failure and to be ready for disaster.
    Not bad traits when under control, but they smother entrepreneurship and risk taking and demonstrate a lack of confidence in our ability to master a situation.
    The answer; manage confidence through understanding what it is. Know that confidence is different from over-optimism, recklessness or spendthriftyness, which is what Andrew is really describing.
    But also know that it is different from pessimism, lack of courage and miserliness.

    I have developed the confidence to know when and how to spend and when to hunker down and control costs.
    A lot of real wealth has been destroyed recently and all the publicity is bad. (It must be real bad when I can't even kiss my pigs goodnight for fear of giving them 'flu). So now is the time to save and invest, regrow our wealth and to remake our own future.
    That is real confidence or, as momina more correctly calls it - level headedness.

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    12

    Chick P

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I have always beleived that confidence is the ability to believe in success. Like all belief, it is a matter of faith, based on personal experience. It is the ability to say yes, whe no one else is even whispering!

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    13

    ddesopo

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I really like this definition: confidence is ?the expectation of positive outcomes.? There are a few layers to this phrase, which takes me the power of positive thought ..."as you think, so you act, as you act, so you become. I will use Adam on American Idol as a case in point because he has so much confidence..and for good reason. He knows his instrument inside, outside, and backwards. He works dilegently, can adapt, and prepared most of his life and is truly ready for the competition. Adam is patient, persistent, and knows exactly who he is and what he wants to do. And in turn, Adam wows us consistently every week (or as nosamg pointed out, delivers quality and proves to the judges et al his value in the marketplace). If you want to see confidence unfold in an entertaining way (or in some cases not), watch Idol with another pair of eyes. We can all learn quite a bit from this well-oiled market research blockbuster machine and apply the learnings in our own dealings in business with confidence.

  •  
    14

    josmiley

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I couldn?t agree more that business leaders need to be more confident, and to do so requires better tools to help make effective decisions regarding strategy, operations, marketing, etc. There is a need in most industries where business leaders struggle with the challenge of optimizing marketing decisions when it comes to resource allocation and pricing strategy. The universe of complexity surrounding marketing decisions due to the proliferation of advertising channels, products, customers, and supplier networks ? reaching billions of possible permutations in large organizations ? makes human navigation of this complexity impossible.

    Extrapolating this truth to the domain of possible customer-product combinations means that each individual combination has a ?right? price, where the price exactly matches what the customer is willing to pay, and no more. The business insight for a company with 400,000 SKUs and 100,000 individual customers is that there are really 40 Billion unique customer-product combinations, and each combination has an optimal price. Using statistical and probabilistic techniques to find these prices with a high level of statistical accuracy is how we apply Scientific Micromarket Management to a Revenue Optimization strategy, while our MarketMover? technology allows us to process these prices and deliver them to salespeople or a comparable customer touch-point for execution in the field. The solutions provide immediate and enduring impacts on the organization?s financial performance and competitive strength, and allow companies to lead their markets by turning complexity into competitive advantage.

    Joe Smiley
    Sentrana
    http://www.sentrana.com

  •  
    15

    ortisoara

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Confidence should not stop you to learn from mistakes. Learning and confidence should go hand in hand and more understanding you aquire more confident you will be.
    Good article!

  •  
    16

    ppacblue

    04/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Dave Edwards previously here said it best, worth repeating:

    "Confidence, self-esteem, and a host of other things all make up attitude. I don't see confidence as something as flighty as positive outcomes but more solidly founded in one being prepared to handle any kind of outcome - that leads to confidence. It requires knowledge and experience applied to each situation and knowing you can manage it."

    No one can be fully prepared to handle all outcomes, but they can learn to handle them if they realize that winning is not always in the positive outcome but in the confrontation of the challenge. If you must always have positive outcomes to stay confident, forget it. That's why we have an epidemic of depression drugs. Even Tiger Woods loses 75% of the time.

  •  
    17

    pdelander

    04/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I agree: well articulated article. You mention delusion and hubris. The false elevation of those two when all is going well make the crash in bad times all the worse. Like Icarus, of the wax wings, who didn't heed the warnings of high altitude (hubris) and crashed into the sea (nothingness or nobody-ness) when the sun melted the wax. People have understood the weaknesses of people for a long, long time: few better than the Greeks.

    An essential prevention is reverence, a deep awareness of the limitations in our skills, achievements, and possibilities. Reverence doesn't prevent us from taking flight and soaring. Reverence is the virtue that enables us to fly safely and long-term.

  •  
    18

    abhirenu

    05/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Hello ,
    Your article is practical and informative.Thanks.It appears to be based on real-life experience and hence looks usable.we all would agree that, like in any other human enterprise,it is hard to maintain a steady level of confidence in all market situations.

    I think self-belief and persistence is the key.

  •  
    19

    patthehat

    05/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Confidence is genuine and apparent to others. Cockiness is contrived and also apparent to others. The latter is usually a poor attempt to compensate for a lack of the former and works like a bullet-proof vest made of cheesecloth. Just tell the truth or shut-up and die like an aviator.

  •  
    20

    mifheili@...

    05/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    A very well presented thoughts on confidence.
    I agree; "confidence takes work". I would like to elaborate on this.
    What builds expectations of positive outcomes is hard work: a thorough understanding, good planning, good foresight, etc. and that translates into this: hard work is a prerequisite for confidence.
    In addition, allow me to introduce yet another dimension into the "landscape of confidence": Rationality or lack of.
    People who are, in theory and in practice, rational, their confidence level is as strong as the rationality they practice in building their expectations about a certain outcome. That is, if they are "reasonably rational", then they are "reasonably confident".
    The people who, generally, view their achievements with objectivity, their expectations are situation-specific, but their confidence will be upheld throughout.
    I do agree that "confidence is a complex quality that plays trick on us" but if and only if we are not true to ourselves. . . . back to "retionality".
    Mohammad I. Fheili
    Organizational Planning & Development Specialist
    Mobile: +9613337175
    Email: mifheili@terra.net.lb

  •  
    21

    priyanka116@...

    05/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    A very good article I would agree would like to add another perspective.

    When they said 'Ignorance is Bliss', it wasn't for nothing. And this goes for confidence too. When you don't EXACTLY know what lies ahead or the complexity of the problem, you are generally a confident person.

    Who won't feel confident in walking a tight-rope a feet above the ground? But rarely anyone would feel confident if the rope is 30ft high, even with harness and protection on. Kids on such a task would fair far better than adults. More so, because adults realise the risks of walking on a 30-ft high tight-rope while for kids, this is just another game. They understand they have protection in terms of harness and they go on from obstacle to obstacle like wind.

    According to me, confidence also lies in Nike's advice 'Just Do It' and keeping a light note to everything in life. Never take something so seriously that it starts daunting you.

    Just like Hellen Keller said "Life is either a daring adventure or nothing."

    Results are only historic measure of success of confidence therein. While doing the task, results can hardly be predicted. All we can focus on while doing the task is to do it with all our might, with all our existence. As is quoted in Bhagavad Gita "Thou hast power only to act not over the result thereof. Act thou therefore without prospect of the result and without succcumbing to inaction"

  •  
    22

    evan freed

    06/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I think the reason for our confidence cycle is because we associate our confidence with one specific element of our life. Be it success, at work, with women/ men, or in sports we associate how we are doing in that area with how we should feel about ourselves.

    I am guilt of this cycle as well, but have learned to curve the fluctuations in my confidence. I try to enjoy everything I do and appreciate how great my life is. By linking how much I love life with my confidence I am now more confident every day. There is a great article on my site about this http://www.emergingtiro.com/?p=233.






    Evan Freed

  •  
    23

    alan buchanan

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I think the key to being a good manager is based around confidence. Getting the right balance, and as you say, kepping control of the confidence "cycle" will mean you have the basis of being a good manager.

    Alan

  •  
    24

    Loraine Antrim

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Confidence, that elusive and much sought after quality, means nothing if it cannot be communicated. If we look at executives and even individuals outside of business, the confidence they display comes through in their words and their non verbal gestures. Without the communication element, confidence is only an internal manifestation.

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    25

    truthseeker1965

    09/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    I agree the confidence is one of the key factor to be successful in business. However, I think even more important is another personal quality: enduring persistence. When we look at successful people, we see some sparkling moments of fame and seeming luck, but behind all of those moments, there is a marathon those folks have been running. There is another study saying, that average person gives up even before they make their first attempt to achieve something. In that sense, it is always interesting to see, what the people who have gone through this say themselves. Fortunately, some of them have found some time to write about it, besides creating and managing another business. Check this collection of famous management books by doers themselves to see see, what masters of confidence have to say about business.

  •  
    26

    estetik

    10/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Confidence: A Vicious Cycle

    Confidence levels may drop during these times. But the formula for business entity success depends on the faith and belief in the principles and laid out guidelines where a venture will ultimately start reaping profits.
    goğus kucultme ameliyatları

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