Saturday, December 21, 2019

Obama on what the Situation Room and hard decisions

Obama on what the Situation Room and hard decisionsObama on what the Situation Room and hard decisionsWhen Barack Obama had to make big decisions during his time as president, he would assemble a team to confer with him in the White House Situation Room.From there, he used a set of specific guidelines to help him make a decision, Obama told the crowd attending a Wednesday tech conference in Las Vegas hosted by the identity-security company Okta.When asked by Okta CEO Todd McKinnon about his system for instituting change, and how he ensured that folks werent just being yes men, Obama gave an answer that welches full of advice anyone could use when trying to make hard decisions.When Obama was first elected into office in 2008, the global economy was crashing. He and his team had to step in and make a bunch of decisions, some of them unpopular, in hopes of changing the course of the country. By the time he left office eight years later, the economy was purring again. And in between, he dealt with everything from the military strike that killed Osama bin Laden to an outbreak of Ebola that threatened to spread to the US.1. Listen to the people who will be most affected by the changeBefore you start wanting to change everything, spend time talking to people you want to change or whose lives are going to be disrupted, Obama said. The goal isnt to warn them or persuade them but to understand them.If they feel heard and youve established a rapport, he said, you have a better chance of getting them on board with the change and to be partners to make the new plan successful. So listening is a good starting point, he said.2. Realize theres no right answer - its about weighing the oddsI used to describe the nature of the presidency as having to make decisions about issues that nobody else could solve or are basically insolvable or at least not perfectly solvable, he said. By definition, if a problem had an obvious solution to it, somebody else would have solved it before i t got to me.Obama said that facing issues nobody beneath him had figured out a solution for meant he was usually working on probabilities, whether it was the bin Laden raid, or do we bail out Chrysler when its hugely unpopular and its not sure the auto company will make it, or, how do we approach dealing with Ebola?3. Seek out the naysayersObviously, before you decide, do your best to gather the best information possible.Once youve got it, you need to gather diverse opinions from people who can argue all the sides, he said.4. Get outside the bubble of people who are supposed to advise youObama says a lot of big decisions were made in the Situation Room.If you were in the Situation Room, the way it would work is youve got some big kahunas sitting around the table, he said. This may include the secretaries of state and defense, the CIA director, the national security adviser, and a bunch of generals he said, look tough and important.Naturally, they all gave their two cents, and they r ed-teamed it, he described, meaning the group tested all the assumptions.Invariably, in the outer ring of the room, thered be a whole bunch of people, often younger but not always, and they had the big binders and theyre doing stuff and taking notes - and those are the people who are actually doing the work, he quipped, and the audience rewarded him with a laugh.Id point to someone in the back and say, you, what do you think? And theyd be shocked that I called on them, he said. And because the person hadnt prepped a response, Obama said, the person would answer honestly.parte of the way I was able to ensure people were not telling me just what I want to hear, was to deliberately reach outside the bubble of the obvious decision makers, he said.5. Test your B.S. detectorEvery leader has strengths and weakness, and one of my strengths is a good B.S. detector, Obama said. But he still tested that people were doing their part and not just agreeing with what he said or telling him what h e wanted to hear. If someone agreed with his idea, he said, he would tell them that he had changed his mind and then grill the person on why the idea was still the best option.6. Insist that people deliver bad nachrichtensendung quickly and are not punished for honest mistakesObamas final guideline is this He always insisted that people deliver bad news quickly. And that meant he couldnt punish the messenger.No one in my White House ever got in trouble for screwing up as long there wasnt malicious intent behind it, he said.And he couldnt resist throwing a bit of shade aimed at the current administration, as well as some in years gone by, like Nixons.And there wasnt any malicious intent, which is why I didnt have scandals. Which seems like it shouldnt be something you brag about, he joked. But actually, if you look at the history of the modern presidency, coming out of the modern presidency without anybody going to jail, is really good. Its a big deal.People used to ask me, Why was I calm during the presidency? In addition to being from Hawaii, which really helped (were just chill), he joked, part of the reason is I set up processes. So by the time I made a decision, I might not get the outcome I wanted, but it might be a 51-49 decision or a 60-40 decision, but I can say I heard all the voices involved - gotten all the info, seen all the perspectives - so when I made decision, I was making it as well as anybody could make it.This article first appeared on Business Insider.

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