How Unlearning Makes You Smarter
groupthink
groupthink

I spent the first 30 years of my life in school. That’s a lot of learning.

I had so much formal schooling that after those three decades, I could only conceive of my life in semesters. And yet, many of the most important and effective decisions I make in both my personal and professional life require something rarely taught in school: I have to actively unlearn.

Unlearning. We could all use a bit more of it. We spend so much time obsessed with acquiring new knowledge that we don’t realize a lot of not-so-useful knowledge also finds its way into our heads.

Mark Twain once said, “Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it’s time to pause and reflect.” That piece of advice is particularly valuable in today’s professional environment where large, too-big-to-fail organizations are regularly disrupted by scrappy, think-outside-the-box startups.

Large companies often have a prevailing mindset that directs many of the decisions they make. Many workplaces are currently obsessed with collaboration, but it takes a very healthy culture to ensure that collaboration doesn’t devolve into groupthink. Employees who disagree with the larger group may self-silence to avoid rocking the boat or risking their jobs.

That’s where groupthink creeps in. Groupthink is a rationally justified consensus that rewards conformity. It can stop you from thinking critically and considering other possible scenarios.

In other words, many organizations institutionalize lazy thinking.

Any time diverse opinions aren’t aired and acknowledged, the outcome suffers. And thinking there’s just one way of doing something breeds complacency, which is the most dangerous trap of all.

Perhaps you’ve experienced an environment where groupthink has stifled originality. Whether it’s a corporation or your own startup, groupthink situations are marked by their failure to encourage challenges to the status quo. It’s a liability. Interrogating assumptions—both your own and those of others—ensures you’re not taking anything for granted. This is the point at which real innovation starts to sprout.

How do you think Uber overtook the taxi industry? Or Netflix beat out Blockbuster? They dismantled all the assumptions and practices that previously anchored those industries and imagined, “What if we did it differently?” They experimented and built a plan of action to support their findings, rather than simply conducting business as usual. They unlearned their way to the top.