SME Magazine SPRING 2017 | Page 15

INSIGHT WHAT THE MAVERICKS CAN TEACH BUSINESS Professor Damian Hughes combines his practical and academic background within sport and change psychology to work as an adviser to the business and sporting elite, specialising in the creation of high performing cultures. Here he highlights the importance of making people think, or what he calls Double Loop Learning… ❝ LISTENING IS TO HEARING WHAT SEEING IS TO LOOKING L et’s start with a simple test. Check this out: below are some words. Read them in your usual way first. ❞ I love Paris in the the springtime You that read wrong. You read that wrong too. How did you go? If you spotted the errors immediately then ask a friend or colleague to read it. Tests show that most people get it wrong first time. Surprising, isn’t it? The reason, as you may have guessed, is all down to one simple thing: our brain’s persistent and hard-wired preoccupation for taking short cuts. When we look at a word, we tend to swallow it whole instead of taking each of its constituent components in turn. As a result, as long as the first and last letters remain the same, our refined cognitive palates are more than happy to swallow it down in one Dick Fosbury does it his way in 1967 (AP/AP/Press Association Images) go as opposed to chewing it over. This is the same when we hear someone talking. Most of the time, as long as we see the lips moving in synch and detect words coming out of their mouths, we are perfectly happy to let our brains flick over to autopilot and let whatever they happen to be saying go in one ear and out of the other. Think about the last time you were genuinely surprised. When I work with teams, I often put a picture of Susan Boyle on the screen and asked how many people recognised her. Nearly 80% acknowledge that they know of the Scottish singer who sprang to prominence on the stage of the TV talent show Britain’s Got Talent in 2009. “Why,” I asked, “do you know who the person who came second on a show so many years ago is yet would struggle to recognise the numerous winners since?’ SME 15