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In this episode of The Good Leadership Podcast, Charles Good explores the challenges leaders face under pressure, emphasizing the reversion effect, where individuals revert to their most practiced habits instead of utilizing their skills.
He discusses the science behind working memory and automatic habits, providing a three-step framework to help leaders prepare for high-stakes situations. The importance of debriefing after such moments is also highlighted as a means for continuous improvement and learning.
TAKEAWAYS
You lose big deals due to retrieval problems, not training gaps.
Under pressure, leaders revert to their oldest habits.
Working memory is limited and can be hijacked by stress.
Skills need to be practiced in varied conditions to transfer effectively.
Preloading decisions can reduce cognitive overload during pressure.
Specific cues can trigger desired behaviors in high-stakes moments.
Debriefing is crucial for learning from leadership experiences.
Surprise in meetings indicates a failure in mental models.
Identifying personal reversion behaviors can improve performance.
Effective leaders build systems to manage pressure, not just rely on motivation.
Chapters
00:00 Understanding the Reversion Effect
03:13 Cognitive Science and Leadership
04:06 The Role of Working Memory
05:52 Retrieval Architecture for Leaders
06:55 Three Steps to Prepare for Pressure
08:57 Managing High-Pressure Moments
10:24 The Importance of Debriefing
12:22 Building Learning Architecture
15:16 Key Insights and Takeaways
By Charles Good4.9
1414 ratings
In this episode of The Good Leadership Podcast, Charles Good explores the challenges leaders face under pressure, emphasizing the reversion effect, where individuals revert to their most practiced habits instead of utilizing their skills.
He discusses the science behind working memory and automatic habits, providing a three-step framework to help leaders prepare for high-stakes situations. The importance of debriefing after such moments is also highlighted as a means for continuous improvement and learning.
TAKEAWAYS
You lose big deals due to retrieval problems, not training gaps.
Under pressure, leaders revert to their oldest habits.
Working memory is limited and can be hijacked by stress.
Skills need to be practiced in varied conditions to transfer effectively.
Preloading decisions can reduce cognitive overload during pressure.
Specific cues can trigger desired behaviors in high-stakes moments.
Debriefing is crucial for learning from leadership experiences.
Surprise in meetings indicates a failure in mental models.
Identifying personal reversion behaviors can improve performance.
Effective leaders build systems to manage pressure, not just rely on motivation.
Chapters
00:00 Understanding the Reversion Effect
03:13 Cognitive Science and Leadership
04:06 The Role of Working Memory
05:52 Retrieval Architecture for Leaders
06:55 Three Steps to Prepare for Pressure
08:57 Managing High-Pressure Moments
10:24 The Importance of Debriefing
12:22 Building Learning Architecture
15:16 Key Insights and Takeaways

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