Minding the Gap
They/We Have Choices. Framing the challenges you are trying to ease is key in gaining support for your work. For example, 600 people are on a deserted island and are hit by a deadly flu. You have a life-saving vaccine. The catch? You can give people two options. Option 1: You have 200 doses of the vaccine and can give it to 200 people, guaranteeing their recovery. Option 2: You can try a new vaccine on all 600 people with only a one-third chance it will save them all. Most people will choose Option 1. But if you frame the dilemma differently -- that Option 1 will kill 400 people and save only 200 lives, most people will opt for Option 2. Stress positive outcomes.
They/We Are Not Helpless. Donors, people in need and frustrated social entrepreneurs need to avoid confusing frustration with the feeling of helplessness -- that sense that, in the face of challenge, nobody can really make a lasting difference. To avoid this, draw up clear goals along with a list of steps required to achieve them. Set deadlines. Start measuring your progress. Broadcast your accomplishments. Measuring incremental change sets up a continuous improvement loop. Also key? Invite the people you're trying to serve to be part of the process. Train them how to measure results incrementally. As long as there is knowledge of impact, the "we are helpless" syndrome won't stand a chance.
They/We Are Not Smarter. Neuroscientists on recent panels refer to stagnant thinking that tends to challenge donors and executives, who have self-wired their brains with data and categorizations. New thinking that challenges these categories tends to be dismissed or downplayed -- not so much because it is bad or good, but rather because it falls outside the categories that most people have already built for themselves to cope with their everyday challenges and to compensate for what they think they do well or poorly. The antidote? Don't ask people to take action. Instead, create situations in which people are expected to act in a certain way unless they take decisive action to behave otherwise. If they opt out, then rinse and repeat. [See the previous bullet point, "They/We Are Not Helpless."]
These are just four quick tips from the pros. What might you add to the list?
(Post by Marcia Stepanek; illustration by Mark Strozier for istock.com)
Labels: best practices, chris frith, marcia stepanek, neuroscience, nonprofit organizations, skoll world forum 2010, social activism, social entrepreneurs, social innovation
7 Comments:
Neuroscientists also say we need to 'retrain our brain' or 'recharge the neurons' to create new patterns. This takes time, reflection and often practice. We thus need to build in workshop, reflection or other time to allow for this to happen.
Thanks, Bonnie, for your comment. Great point. I think that in some ways we've been tricked by the culture of "now" to demand immediacy from that which cannot be hurried. I've been been watching with great interest the slow food and slow money movements and the lessons both hold for contemporary leadership challenges.
Yes, if one reads all the current commentary about how our obsessiveness with data flow and instant gratification is actually hindering our capacity to engage in contemplative practice and thought, one quickly sees we've got a wee dilemma. The trick will be developing a healthy balance between unplugged experiences/ savoring and data management (i use the term loosely here).
So I think two things are going on here -- the challenge of acceleration in our culture and cultural dictates that say speed is good and reward it. Again, I think the "new leadership" will need to reward skillsets that include pacing, prioritizing, backbone (to say no) and a living, breathing internal culture that worships "less-is-more." Otherwise, the proverbial rat race will ever-more become a marathon than nobody wins.
This is a really good article and gives some validation to what I've been working on for a few months. I'm a social entrepreneur building a social change marketing agency. Too often, especially where I live, Detroit, MI, we are spoonfed the promise of "urban renewal" by our leaders. While investing in infrastructure is nice, it doesn't really change the people side of the formula. Hence, we at Reframe Detroit are developing a "people renewal" organization that focuses on changing the values, attitudes, beliefs, and eventually, behaviors. I believe the nueroscience approach is the only way to right my community and save it. I'd appreciate it you follow our progress and offer any advice or kind words as we embark on our mission. Feel free to follow us on twitter, @reframedetroit or on our website at ReframeDetroit.com
Michael - Sounds like a great project; I lived in Detroit for a segment of my life and still have family in Grosse Pointe. I'll definitely want to hear more. Keep us posted.
This is a great article! As a neuroscientist in training I love learning about new theory's. Dr. Frith is a great researcher!
My social enterprise does similar work with neuroscience and inspiring change makers. Check us out at www.goibelieve.com
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