Underlying Motivations
The underlying premise of a concept like public choice theory is that people respond to incentives. Even the government, as insulated as it is from the market, is still driven by a self-interest that colors and shapes its decisions. It’s a fact that is manifested individually first, and then collectively in second order.
This is something I think about a lot. Asking: what’s behind this? why is it this way? what am I not seeing that influences this situation? The eye of the needle determines what gets threaded through it. And people and the constraints of their environment function much in the same way. I’ve always found that getting things done is about understanding the forces that are acting on the people involved. Ignore the actions; consider the factors that created and shaped them.
It’s funny because what makes people the angriest or the most disappointed was often the most understandable. Yet their energy is typically funneled towards the examples that are least typical (and least changeable). Take something like ethics in the media. People focus on rare but overt conflicts of interest, nevertheless letting subtle but pervasive biases stand and be rewarded. For instance, everyone would agree that journalists shouldn’t cover things they have a financial stake in. But to me, its this kind of brazen corruption we should be the least worried about—at least it is easy to spot. Meanwhile, we have no problem accepting that how journalists or bloggers cover is something from which they receive direct financial benefit. The choice to make a story more than it is, to extrapolate wildly or to create controversy are all part of how a writer makes a name from themselves, particularly in a world of pageview bonuses.
The idea is to make yourself a student of incentives and of motivations. To understand that this person is addicted to chaos, that another gets paid to distort, that what matters to you is not necessarily what matters to them, or that you know what, it just can’t be helped—their self-interest is too compelling. Because if you study it and accept it uncritically, you can position yourself to travel along with that current, instead of fighting hopelessly to make it upstream. But this is contingent acknowledging a simple rule of thumb: there is always more going on beneath the surface. There is always an incentive. And a response.
It’s all in the game, yo
With the media, and bloggers, it is not always incentives that drive what and how they report but also their world view, which is influenced on how they were raised, where they come from, what they’ve been taught, the experiences they’ve had, and so on. I think what this means is that diversity is something that should really be valued, both in the media and the political system (Muslim in congress, for example, or women as editors). So many times it seems that, especially in the case of American politics, there’s this attitude of “us versus them”, and in America, of all places, built on diversity and acceptance, this seems to make the least sense. But there it is.
Not only asking what incentive, what motivation, but also where is this person coming from? what do they have to say and why? is important when you’re taking in information, especially matters of opinion, from anywhere. It would make us all more balanced, more self-educated and self-aware, as well as open to new ideas and perhaps even the possibility of being misguided or even wrong. Can you imagine if those in politics were more aligned with a perspective such as that, instead of feeling the need to blindly swing daggers? Now all we need is a stronger incentive to think that way, instead of hearing something, shrugging our shoulders, and saying, well ok, that’s that.
Incentives, motivations, personality–these are the “more going on” I was talking about.
Speaking of which…
http://andrewchenblog.com/2011/03/15/quora-how-did-myspace-with-a-smart-team-of-people-do-such-a-bad-uiux-job-with-the-new-design/
It’s funny that people think that journalists shouldn’t cover something from which they receive direct financial benefits, but they listen to financial planners giving them “financial advice”. These so-called “experts” have a very direct financial benefit from selling certain investment products. The same goes for doctors, which get financial benefits from selling drugs and surgeries.
People like to believe that other people are not motivated by money, but in all professions where the “expert” knows much more about the subject than the customer, the customer gets ripped off – doctors, contractors, auto mechanics, plumbers.
The trick of business would be to have some understanding that who else knows.
Nearly all quality improvement comes via simplification of design, manufacturing… layout, processes, and operations.