Do You Offer Multiple Motives for Decisions?


Do You Offer Multiple Motives for Decisions?

Trigger Question #70

(This is for all you festive procrastinators who are still struggling to decide on the “right” gift for your significant other. Good luck.)

We often defend our decisions and our actions by giving many reasons and explanations. And even excuses.

But here’s the rub. If what you plan to do is clearly important, then you wouldn’t need many reasons, explanations, or excuses. Only one will do. The consequential one. The one that can trigger significant consequences.

The more you try to explain using multiple motivations, the more you will sound as if you are defending your decision. Or worse, that you are still convincing… yourself.

Next time before you decide, and before you act, stop and think. What is your one critical motive? What is the single reason that highlights the crucial consequence of not deciding or not acting?

Once you can clearly articulate the crucial consequence, then go ahead. Decide and act.

But if you don’t have one critical motive, or you have many motives, then it’s best to think again. Because, as I said, the more reasons you have, the more likely you are still defending or convincing, even yourself.

Once you get the hang of this one-critical-motive method, apply it far and wide at work. Should you keep a policy or should you dump it? What is the one critical consequence either way? What are the consequences if you keep or dump a procedure, a physical asset, a problematic project, a troublesome employee?

Next, apply it at home and in other areas of your non-work life. Trust me, it works everywhere.

But if the method doesn’t work for you, then dump it. Because it has failed its own one-critical-motive test. It hasn’t convinced you that using it is consequential.

Welcome to my side of the nonsense divide.

. . .

Quote of the Moment:

“Don’t assume many motives must matter to motivate a meaningful move.” The Chief Nonsense Officer.

. . .

Please share this email far and wide. Simply hit the "forward" button.

I boost careers by helping people deal with the nonsense of pleasing a boss, playing nice with colleagues, making subordinates productive, and living a life. Read more

Give some nonsense stuff to yourself, your colleagues, your friends, your foes. Explore the Nonsense Shop


113 Cherry St #92768, Seattle, WA 98104-2205
Unsubscribe · Preferences

NonsenseAtWork

Do you need help to deal with the nonsense of pleasing a boss, playing nice with colleagues, making subordinates productive, and living a life? Subscribe to get INSIGHTS on Tuesdays and TRIGGER QUESTIONS on Fridays.

Read more from NonsenseAtWork

Insights To Boost Your Career and Success ’Tis the Season When Some Sellers Won’t Sell Insight #56 Once upon a time... Actually, this is a true story as then reported in the news. A visitor to London in December of a certain year spent hours looking for the latest must-have Santa toy for his son in Africa. The desired toy was not to be found at any store. But the determined father stumbled upon an out of the way store where, oh happiness, one toy remained in stock. And that was the problem....

Questions To Trigger Your Thinking Does Your Attitude Contradict Your Mindset? Or Vice Versa? Trigger Question #65 Some of us use mindset and attitude as synonyms. But if we think about it, then maybe we shouldn't. Mindset is a way of thinking. Attitude is a way of being. Your habitual way of being (your attitude) can influence your way of thinking (your mindset). For example, if you adopted a forceful position (attitude) on a topic, then you will more easily see things that support your...

Insights To Boost Your Career and Success Thanksgiving Before Great Expectations Insight #176 Next week, in the USA, we enter the period of giving thanks and then we jump straight into the period of great expectations. Actually, this is the correct order of things. Gratitude first, then expectation. Big or small. A common mistake we make is to withhold gratitude until we have received. We wait until we can judge whether what we have received is worthy of thanksgiving. Imagine being served by...