
Two candidates are being interviewed for a leadership position in your company. Both have strong resumes, but while one seems to be bursting with new and daring ideas, the other comes across as decidedly less creative (though clearly still a smart cookie). Who gets the job?
The answer,
unfortunately, is usually the less creative candidate. This fact may or may not
surprise you – you yourself may have been the creative candidate who got the
shaft. But what you’re probably wondering is, why?
After all, it’s quite
clear who should be getting the job. Studies show that leaders who are more
creative are in fact better able to effect positive change in their
organizations, and are better at inspiring others to follow their lead.
And yet, according to
recent research there is good reason to believe that the people with the most
creativity aren’t given the opportunity to lead, because of a process that
occurs (on a completely unconscious level) in the mind of everyone who has ever
evaluated an applicant for a leadership position.
The problem, put simply,
is this: our idea of what a prototypical “creative person” is like is completely
at odds with our idea of a prototypical “effective leader.”
Creativity is associated
with nonconformity, unorthodoxy, and unconventionality. It conjures visions of
the artist, the musician, the misunderstood poet. In other words, not the sort
of people you usually put in charge of large organizations. Effective leaders,
it would seem, should provide order, rather than tossing it out the window.
Our idea of a
prototypical creative person is completely at odds with our idea of a
prototypical effective leader.
Unconsciously, we assume
that someone who is creative can’t be a good leader, and as a result, any
evidence of creativity can diminish a candidate’s perceived leadership
potential.
In one study conducted by
organizational psychologists Jennifer Mueller, Jack Goncalo, and Dishan Kamdar,
employees rated the responses of nearly 300 of their (unidentified) coworkers
to a problem-solving task for both creativity (the extent to which their ideas
were novel and useful) and as evidence of leadership potential. They found that
creativity and leadership potential were strongly negatively correlated – the
more creative the response, the less effective a leader the responder appeared.
The good news is, the
bias can be wiped out – in fact, reversed – if evaluators have a charismatic
leader (i.e., someone known for their uniqueness and individualism, like a
Steve Jobs, Richard Branson, or Carly Fiorina) rather than an effective but
non-charismatic leader in mind.
The good news is, the
bias can be wiped out – in fact, reversed.
So what can you do in an
interview to fight the creativity bias? You have some options:
1.Be armed with evidence of
your leadership abilities. Bias is most powerful when there is nothing else
concrete to go on – that’s when our brains (unconsciously) fill in the blanks.
2.Don’t just focus on your
past experience. Talk about what you see as your leadership potential – the
kind of leader you see yourself becoming. Studies show that interviewers are
drawn to candidates described as having potential (often more than actual
achievement.) They’ll spend more time thinking about you, and that extra
thinking results in more accuracy and less bias.
3.Try to counteract the
bias subtly by talking about the charismatic, creative leaders who have been
role models for you in the past.
4.Tackle the bias head on.
Acknowledge that creative types aren’t often chosen for leadership positions,
while arguing (nicely) that your ability to offer fresh and innovative
solutions to problems is essential to effective leadership, rather than at odds
with it.
courtesy: www.99u.com
courtesy: www.99u.com
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