YouTube video summary

Rituals of Great Decision-Making | Lenny & Friends Summit 2024

Psychology01 Nov 20249 min summaryFrom Lenny's Podcast
Rituals of Great Decision-Making | Lenny & Friends Summit 2024
Lenny's Podcast
YouTube

Introduction and Inspiration for "Rituals of Great Teams"

  • Rituals are a topic of interest, and people have normal hobbies, but collecting people's rituals is a unique one, which is being turned into a book called "Rituals of Great Teams" 32s.
  • The inspiration for the book started with a conversation with Bing Gordon, the chief creative officer at Electronic Arts, who mentioned that great companies have a small list of "golden rituals" that pass three tests: they're named, every employee knows them by their first Friday, and they're templated 1m4s.
  • Examples of golden rituals include Amazon's six-pagers, Google's OKRs, and Salesforce's V2MOM, and having a great set of golden rituals is essential for a company to be great 1m20s.
  • The book "Rituals of Great Teams" is being written in the open, and readers can join the Brain Trust at ritualgreatteams.com to provide feedback and contributions 1m40s.

Rituals as a Reflection of Culture

  • A conversation with Dharmesh Shah, founder of HubSpot, revealed an interesting perspective on rituals, including the idea that companies build two products: one for customers and one for employees, which is often described as culture 1m58s.
  • Rituals are a two-way mirror of a company's culture, and designing rituals is essential for building a strong culture 2m41s.

Focus on Decision-Making Rituals

  • The focus of the talk is on decision-making rituals, specifically how to ask the right question, follow the right decision process, and involve the right stakeholders 3m14s.
  • The talk will provide many examples of decision-making rituals, which are meant to be inspirational and can be used as is if they resonate with the audience 3m36s.
  • The main point of the discussion is to inspire the audience to design their own rituals, rather than adopting someone else's, and to take control of how their teams run their rituals 3m44s.
  • The discussion will include examples from Kota, a company that offers a product for running rituals, but the main point is to implement these ideas in whatever toolkit is being used 3m53s.

Asking the Right Question

  • The first topic of discussion is asking the right question, which is illustrated by a story from the speaker's time at YouTube in 2008 4m13s.
  • At YouTube in 2008, the team was facing a dilemma about what to do with search queries for the TV show "Modern Family", which was not available on the platform 4m31s.
  • The team was divided on whether to link out to ABC.com, where the show was available for free, or to prioritize uploading great content to YouTube 5m32s.
  • The debate persisted, and the team decided to hold an offsite to discuss the issue, during which the speaker was tasked with framing the discussion and gathering data 5m57s.
  • The speaker read a paper from the Google shopping team, which found that users preferred Amazon over Google shopping because of the consistent experience it offered 6m17s.
  • The speaker decided to reframe the discussion around the question of whether the online video market would value consistency or comprehensiveness in 10 years 6m53s.
  • The team concluded that the market would value consistency, and in hindsight, this discussion, which took place 16 years ago, was correct, as the online video market has exploded and prioritized consistency 7m4s.
  • The concept of "Igen questions" was developed, which refers to the question that, when answered first, would answer most of the other questions, and is based on the math concept of "Igen vectors" from linear algebra 7m42s.
  • Igen questions are the most discriminating questions in a multi-dimensional space, and answering them can resolve many other related questions 7m45s.
  • The idea is to identify the right question to ask, rather than just focusing on getting the right answer, and to think about how to get to the right question in the first place 8m45s.

Forming the Right Decision Process

  • A conversation with Colin Brer, former Chief of Staff to Jeff Bezos at Amazon, discussed the importance of forming the right decision process, and how Amazon's shift away from PowerPoint presentations in 2004 changed the company's culture 9m2s.
  • In 2004, Jeff Bezos sent out a memo banning PowerPoint presentations, and around the same time, a new product called "Rightly" was released, which allowed for co-writing and commenting, and had a significant impact on Amazon's decision-making process 9m20s.
  • The use of Google Docs and similar tools for decision-making was discussed, and the limitations of relying on the comments section of a document for important decisions were highlighted 10m28s.
  • The conversation led to a discussion about what's wrong with relying on Google Docs for important decisions and how to improve the decision-making process 10m31s.
  • In traditional document review processes, comments are often reviewed in the order they were received, which can lead to inefficient discussions and important points being overlooked 11m7s.
  • A common issue with traditional comment reviews is that they can be disorganized and may not accurately reflect the importance or relevance of each comment 11m6s.
  • Meanwhile, important discussions and questions may be happening in the background, such as in Slack threads, which can be disconnected from the formal review process 11m26s.

The Two-Way Write-Up/Dory Pulse Ritual

  • A more effective approach to decision-making is the "Two-Way Write-Up" or "Dory Pulse" ritual, which involves adding comments to a table, voting them up or down, and asking participants to go on the record with their views 12m10s.
  • The Dory Pulse ritual includes a "Pulse" section where participants can share their thoughts and opinions without seeing others' responses, to avoid groupthink 12m18s.
  • This ritual is reflective of Koda's company culture, which values the idea that great ideas can come from anywhere and encourages open and thoughtful discussion 12m47s.
  • The Dory Pulse ritual has been adapted and copied by other companies, with variations tailored to their specific needs and cultures 13m13s.
  • Examples of adapted rituals include Zoom's "Root Cause Reasoning" process, which focuses on identifying the underlying causes of problems, and Coinbase's use of a similar template to facilitate effective decision-making 13m36s.

Other Decision-Making Rituals

  • Sergey, the former CPO, implemented a decision-making process inspired by Dory Pulse, but with a clear decider, where everyone writes down their opinions, and the decider's opinion is the one that matters 13m55s.
  • At YouTube, a problem with planning was that everyone would ask for resources for their project, so they started doing "$100 voting," where everyone allocates $100 across all projects, encouraging people to think about the company's overall goals 14m29s.
  • This "$100 voting" ritual helped people switch from a team mindset to a company mindset, changing how they thought about decision-making 14m29s.
  • David Singleton at Stripe shared a ritual called "spin the wheel," where they randomly select an outage to discuss during operational reviews, emphasizing the importance of addressing both big and small problems for 99.9% reliability 15m2s.
  • Stripe applies the "spin the wheel" idea to various rituals, focusing on both major and minor issues 15m38s.
  • Zapier, a distributed team company, developed a ritual called "silent time," where team members write down their thoughts and then read others', but they adapted this ritual to ensure everyone reads and marks others' topics before starting discussions 16m2s.

Matching Decision-Making Processes and Culture

  • The key takeaway is to match decision-making processes and culture to achieve specific goals and emphasize certain values, and to find the right rituals that fit the company culture 16m42s.
  • Companies like Pixar and Netflix have developed unique rituals for decision-making, such as Pixar's "Brain Trust" and Netflix's "Gladiator meetings," which have contributed to their success 17m4s.

Eliminating Standing Attendees and the Catalyst Method

  • A common issue with decision-making meetings is the presence of standing attendees who may not be necessary or may be disruptive, with some meetings having as many as 60 attendees 17m51s.
  • A proposed solution is to eliminate standing attendees from decision-making meetings, which may seem impractical but can be achieved through a new approach 18m0s.
  • The "Catalyst" method involves blocking a specific time slot on everyone's calendar and allowing individuals to schedule topics for discussion, filling in the stage and required roles 18m37s.
  • The Catalyst method uses a doc to outline the roles and stages, similar to DAC or RAPID, but with custom terms, and generates unique calendar invites and Slack notifications for each topic 18m46s.
  • This approach has been shown to increase productivity, with the ability to get through 50 decisions per week, compared to the previous 5-6 topics per week 19m51s.
  • The Catalyst method also allows for asynchronous decision-making, where individuals can mark a topic as "default async" and receive reminders to fill out their feedback before a certain time 20m5s.

Decision Forums and Models

  • A decision forum can be either an obligation or a forcing function, depending on how it is structured, and it's essential to determine whether it accelerates or decelerates the decision-making process 20m25s.
  • Different models, such as the Pixar Brain Trust model, the Netflix Gladiator model, or the Coda Catalyst model, can be used to structure decision forums 20m36s.

Identifying Decision Stakeholders

  • When deciding who to invite to a decision forum, it's crucial to consider whether the founder needs to be invited to every meeting 20m51s.
  • A ritual called "flash tags" was developed by Dares, where feedback is accompanied by a hashtag indicating its severity, such as #FYI, #plea, or #dying on a hill 21m6s.
  • The flash tags ritual was initially used to add feedback to templates, but it was often added too late in the process, so a new idea called "proactive flash tags" was developed 21m44s.
  • Proactive flash tags involve creating a list of decisions and adding four columns to map to the four flash tags, allowing stakeholders to pre-indicate their level of involvement 22m12s.
  • The proactive flash tags system helps to determine who needs to be involved in a decision and at what stage, and it has implications for who should be invited to the Catalyst 22m30s.

Key Steps in the Decision-Making Process

  • To encourage stakeholders to engage with the proactive flash tags system, it was made easily accessible by linking it to a central decision tracker and incorporating it into various meetings and one-on-ones 23m3s.
  • Effective decision-making requires the right people to be involved, and finding a scalable way to identify the right decision stakeholders is crucial for every decision 23m46s.
  • A decision-making process should consist of four key steps: encouraging people to ask the right questions, having a clear process for making decisions, having a scalable way for the decision forum to accelerate progress, and identifying the right decision stakeholders 23m51s.
  • The decision-making process should reflect the organization's culture, and having the right people involved is essential for its success 24m2s.

Resources and Community

  • The rituals and processes discussed are published in "Codh 2024," which includes links to various rituals and a link to the "Rituals Brain Trust" community 24m19s.
  • The "Rituals Brain Trust" community is an invitation-only space where individuals can contribute and share rituals to improve decision-making processes, and others can take and use these rituals to improve their own decision-making 24m32s.
Made with Recall · in 3 seconds

Get a summary like this for anything you read, watch or save.

Recall summarizes any link you paste, then keeps it in your personal library so you can search, chat with it, and never lose a key idea again.

YouTube videosArticlesPodcastsPDFsAnything else
Save this summary

Then save anything you watch or read next.

Bookmark this summary, then save any video, article or PDF you read next.

Save to your library

Ready to get started?

Save, summarize & chat with your content.

GET STARTED

IT'S FREE

No credit card required · 30 Day Refund on Premium · 24 Hour Support

Recall web app on laptop