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Jamie Lawrence

Wagestream

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Instinctive leadership – using intuitive intelligence to guide decision-making

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This article was written by Brian Bacon, Chairman and Founder of Oxford Leadership Academy.

"The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift." – Albert Einstein

Do you trust your gut when it comes to the big stuff? Instincts and ‘hunches’ may have a comforting influence on day-to-day decisions, but when it comes to major strategic choices and matters of great complexity, intuition doesn’t often get a seat in the C-Suite.

Leaders are more likely to rely on hard evidence and data, logic and rational analysis to support their biggest and most important decisions. However, recent insights and discoveries in the field of neuroscience have given new importance and credibility to the role of intuition in leadership, especially when it comes to decision-making.

The place of intuition in business

Can you think of an occasion where you’ve had a gut feeling that something wasn’t right about a significant business issue but didn’t listen to your intuition and later regretted it? Do you often doubt your intuition in favour of hard evidence to support your business decision? If so, you may be underutilising one of the most powerful leadership tools, your intuitive intelligence.

We use our instinct and intuition in many facets of our lives. It may be one thing to do so in your personal life – but perhaps quite another to use it at work?

Many people may feel that intuition has little or no place in business, that decisions should be based on empirical evidence rather than on trusting your gut feeling. But there is increasing evidence that intuition is more than merely a feeling. Many scientists now believe that it is, in fact, the result of our brains piecing together information and experiences to come to different, and less obvious solutions and conclusions. Publications, such as ‘Intelligent Memory: Improve the Memory That Makes You Smarter,’ by neuroscientist Barry Gordon, show that decision-making and intuition are inextricably linked.

IQ v Emotional Intelligence v Intuitive Intelligence

Leadership experts and those working in organisational development give a lot of credence to IQ and EQ (emotional intelligence) but in fact ‘intuitive intelligence’ is perhaps the greatest weapon for business decision making. Some people think that if they’re not creative they don’t have much propensity for intuitive thinking. They assume that intuition, like creative thinking is a right brain function, however whereas many skills and capabilities are relegated to the ‘left’ brain, or ‘right’ brain, intuition is a ‘whole’ brain function.

I’ve spent much of my career working with some of the world’s largest corporations, and some of the best managers and strategists used their intuition first before looking to back it up with facts; almost as if the intuitive approach was the starting point and the measurement came afterwards. Intuition needs to be trained. It’s a learned skill, and the more you use it, the more reliable it becomes.

What is intuition?

The Oxford Dictionaries define intuition as “the ability to understand something instinctively, without the need for conscious reasoning.” We sometimes think of it as something magical, quixotic, somewhat unreliable because, often, what passes for intuition often can’t be trusted. Freud introduced us to the idea that what we think we know about ourselves may have nothing to do with what is actually going on in our psyches. More than a century of research clearly demonstrates that some of our behaviour is directed by unconscious wishes or beliefs that are the exact opposite of what we think we want or believe to be true. Recent neuroscience research has added to this the sense that we can’t always trust our thoughts or feelings to tell us what is going on inside of us. But, with intuitive intelligence we can know. Imagine you’re at a noisy party, trying to make yourself heard amidst the din of the crowd. Suddenly, someone speaks your name – and you snap to the voice instantly, loud and clear. Psychologists call this the “cocktail party” effect. It shows that we hear as "loudest" the thing we deem most important.

The important inner voice in your head

What goes for cocktail parties also goes for the voices in our heads. Somewhere in there, among the worries, doubts, questions, advice, and roar of the crowd, lives your intuition, your "inner voice." You can hear it to the extent that you have honed your intuitive intelligence well enough to give it your undivided attention – and know yourself well enough to distinguish valid intuition from wishful thinking, ego or unwarranted attachment to an idea.
Intuitive intelligence can be trained. We can learn to use intuition in trustworthy ways to address issues large and small – to create opportunities, develop a plan, solve pressing problems, open up new possibilities, resolve a dilemma, etc.

Those who are training to sharpen their cognitive sensors are encouraged to use their intuitive senses when they are making decisions. This is especially beneficial when you are taking some tough decisions which have far-reaching implications in your work life.

Your intuition can reveal some aspects of your situation which your ability to reason cannot. In fact, your internal radar works perfectly. It is the operator who is in question. There are things your gut knows long before your intellect catches on. Every day, all day, an intelligent agent is sending you messages. The best leaders have learned not only to just trust their instincts, but to obey them. Obeying your instincts requires that you listen to your own internal voice, acknowledge your internal reference point, rather than rush to embrace the myriad references and voices of others. Your instincts are readily available 24/7.

Your mind is continually in overdrive. You spend a lot of time in an internal dialogue – in other words, you’re busy having a conversation with yourself. If you were to speak out loud the dialogue that goes on inside your head, you would be labeled, well…a bit crazy. And often the self-talk is negative rather than positive and constructive. You can change that.

The basis of intuitive intelligence

The basis for ‘intuition intelligence’ is a powerful new science of the mind known as ‘Intelligent Memory’ – a convergence of insights from behavioural psychology, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and molecular biology.

As Barry Gordon states in his book (Intelligent Memory: Improve the Memory That Makes You Smarter) – “Since birth our brains compartmentalize experiences and information akin to an elaborate closet organization system. The brain warehouses existing knowledge into separate files and, when new data is received, it searches the stored files looking for similar information. Upon finding a match, the new information is combined with the existing knowledge to create a fresh thought. This process, called intelligent memory, is the basis for producing creative, breakthrough ideas.”

Looking at this further…the breaking down and storing process is analysis. The searching and combining is intuition. Both are necessary for all kinds of thought. Even a mathematical calculation requires the intuition part, to recall the symbols and formula previously learned in order to apply them to the problem.

When the pieces come off the shelf smoothly, in familiar patterns … you don’t even realise it has happened. When lots of different pieces combine into a new pattern, you feel it as a flash of insight, the famous "aha!" moment.

The situations in which leaders most consistently rely on their intuitive intelligence in business include:

  • In a crisis: When rapid response is required and there is no time to go through a complete rational process of analysis
  • In high-speed change: When the factors upon which decisions are made change rapidly, without warning
  • In a messy situation: When a problem or challenge is poorly constructed
  • In an ambiguous situation: When the factors to be considered are hard to articulate without sounding contradictory

In helping leaders expand their intuitive intelligence and develop greater trust in their ‘flashes of insight’ we train them in the following:

1. Be Present: Become mentally quiet and develop an ‘eye of the storm’ mental posture. As you may have seen a martial arts master do – centre yourself mentally, disconnect from the emotions of the situation. Detach from all noise and voices, just be still and observe. Be inside. Listen. Look. Suspend judgment. Don’t analyse or try to understand. Just quietly observe. In a crisis, this can be done in just a matter of seconds. It’s the starting point to engagement of the whole brain.

2. See the whole picture: Interrogate the context. Become a detached observer of the situation and embrace the big picture. Get off the dance floor, stand on the balcony and look at the situation from a different, elevated perspective. See what has gone on before. Recall lessons from history. Things you’ve read and may have forgotten. Actually it’s all stored there in your intelligent memory. Engage other players involved. Talk with them. Not at them. Be curious. Take in all different perspectives and data points. This engages your intelligent memory and theirs as well. Such conversations stimulate creative collaboration. One person’s observation, sparks off another and chain reaction of insights emerge. Now, the whole brain is engaged.

3. Clarify Your Intention: Be clear on your purpose. Bring this into the front of your mind. Your intention becomes the filter through which you observe a situation. This provides focus and helps you zoom in on the few things that are most important. The clearer and more resolute your intention, the faster and more reliable will be the ‘flash of insight’ that follows. In leadership training we place a lot of intention on developing clarity of purpose. This requires deep reflection on your own truth about yourself, where you’re headed and why.

4. Engage your Values: Either consciously or unconsciously, all choices and decisions are driven by what you value most. The clearer you are about the values and principles which guide you, the faster and more reliable will be your decision making and choice selection. Where you will end up in any situation in life will ultimately be determined by the choices you make, so close examination of values is about the most important work a leader can do to prepare for making good choices. When observing and examining any situation your purpose and values engage together to provoke a flash of insight that ‘feels right’. This is when your intuition can be trusted.

5. Fierce Resolve: Total and absolute commitment follows when there is a feeling of certainty about the things you ‘feel are right’. The power of discrimination and judgment lies at the heart of leadership wisdom and character. Your ability to trust and execute your choices, based on that ‘flash of insight’ requires consistent alignment of intention, words and actions. A decision is worthless unless it is bought into action and followed through without second-guessing or procrastination. In great leaders, this is seen as their fierce resolve to stay the course and do what needs to be done.

This five-step process to develop intuitive intelligence takes place at a sub-conscious level, even if you use your conscious mind to formulate or rationalise the final results. Information is processed in parallel, not sequentially. Instead of going through the logical sequence one by one, the leader sees the situation more as a whole, with different fragments emerging simultaneously in parallel. Your brain can be trained to work as an advanced pattern recognition device. Your subconscious mind finds links between your new situation and various patterns of your past experiences. In a team setting this becomes even more powerful, as you replicate what happens in the brain in a group setting. This is how high performing teams develop creative solutions and collaborative action, based on collective insights and wisdom.

Intuition intelligence helps you navigate faster through vast amounts of unstructured data and can work around gaps and conflicts in the information. Yet, even the most highly developed intuition can be misled if too many of the facts are wrong or missing, so don’t neglect the rational mind or need for diligence in fact gathering and analysis. Just get the balance right. The intuitive mind can become your greatest weapon in business, if you learn how to use it confidently and accurately.

2 Responses

  1. The presence of mind when playing chess

     That’s a good point. I think that’s an exciting avenue, exploring the why of inner dialogue: how we learn to make better decisions. Viewing memory as something that is intelligent opens up the possibility for developing the mind and the ‘gut feeling’ to make better decisions. Returning to the example of the chess players, perhaps if the same people were asked to describe how they felt when they made those decisions, anxiety would not top the list. Being sufficiently relaxed in one’s self to allow that natural intelligent memory to find voice is key to making better decisions. That’s why it’s so important to have the presence to be able to trust your gut. 

     

    — Brian Bacon

  2. Intuition vs gut reaction

    Great post and interesting dicussion point. Intuition or gut reaction IS simply experience that has become so embedded it is hard to articulate. Think of riding a bike – when you start it is difficult, it takes time to balance, steer, push pedals and so on. This is called the declarative stage of learning. Once you can easily ride a bike you would actually find it difficult to go back to ‘not being able’ to ride a bike – the feeling is intuitive. This stage of where learning is embedded is procedural knowledge.  I always remember reading great studies of expert chess players – when their brains were scanned and they were playing chess they were asked ‘why did you make that move’. Often the response was ‘gut feeling’ – but the brain scans were showing up flashes in the memory centre part of the brain – what they ‘felt’ was the right move was actually very sophisticated memory processes – so embedded and so practised they could no longer articlute why were they were able to make the move they did. A fascinating area of study!!

     

    — Lucy Standing

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Jamie Lawrence

Insights Director

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