1. You need to complete this task in strict accordance with the detailed Requirements/Guidelines. - Management
Type of service: Essay
Academic level: High School
Word count: 1500 words excluding references
Course name: mgt18 managing diverse team
Citation style: add to details
Number of sources: 5
Project Title:
imagining team
Paper details/Instructions:
Dear writer,
I have uploaded prompt. Please read it.
I have uploaded file course-textbook, you Only read these 2 articles (and make sure the essay will include reference to these 2 article):
1.Earley, P. C. & Mosakowski, E., (October, 2004). “Cultural Intelligence.” Harvard Business Publishing Product
(You can find this article in the CLASS 5, No. 20 on page 123 of textbook)
2.Meyer, Erin. (May, 2014). “Navigating the Cultural Minefield.” Harvard Business Publishing Product
(You can find this article in the CLASS 8, No. 29 on page 193 of textbook)
Also, please read and include some reference to these 3 articles in these links below:
1. https://www.erinmeyer.com/mapping-out-cultural-differences-on-teams/
2. https://www.erinmeyer.com/building-trust-across-cultures/
3. https://www.erinmeyer.com/the-most-productive-ways-to-disagree-across-cultures/
Last reference: please read uploaded file Whats Your Cultural Profile and include the information of my cultural profile in the essay.
So, there are total 5 sources for reference (two articles in the textbook belong to one sources). I have provided you these 5 sources. You do not need to find any other sources by yourself.
Please have a look of the uploaded worksheet before writing.
Be sure to write in first-person narrative. Please keep in mind my personal cultural profile(you can find in the uploaded file Whats Your Cultural Profile). Please use simple English and deliberately keep some grammar and word choice mistake in the paper.
Thanks.
------------------------------------------
1. You need to complete this task in strict accordance with the detailed Requirements/Guidelines.
2.Must be original works, to prohibit any copying or plagiarism.
3. If you have any question on this task, please feel free to contact us anytime.
MGT 18: Essay #2 Cultural Competence and Global Teams / McKay
ESSAY #2 CULTURAL COMPETENCE AND GLOBAL TEAMS
PREP WORKSHEET
Read the entire essay prompt carefully. You are ready to write when you can respond to the following
questions. Please bring this completed worksheet with you if you come into OHs to discuss your ideas.
1. Describe your hypothetical team: name the three cultures represented by teammates and the team’s
mission or goal. This is your introduction and requires a thesis statement.
Team member #1 (this is you): ________________________________________________________
Team member #2: __________________________________________________________________
Team member #3: __________________________________________________________________
Team Mission: _____________________________________________________________________
2. Which of Meyer’s 8 behavioral scales will you discuss? For each of the 3 scales you choose, identify shared
preferences, areas of conflict and specific multicultural behavioral solutions you will discuss. Please include
opportunities or challenges associated with a team that has no areas of conflict or a team that has no
shared preferences on a particular scale (if this is the case). Avoid naming yourself the team leader and
being tempted to decide for the team. Also avoid majority rule. This is a chance for you to think through
multicultural solutions to multicultural problems.
Scale #1: __________________________________________________________________________
Shared Preferences: _________________________________________________________________
Areas of Conflict: ___________________________________________________________________
Behavioral Solutions: ________________________________________________________________
What if there are no shared Preferences or no areas of Conflict? What is gained or lost? __________
Scale #2: __________________________________________________________________________
Shared Preferences: _________________________________________________________________
Areas of Conflict: ___________________________________________________________________
Behavioral Solutions: ________________________________________________________________
What if there are no shared Preferences or no areas of Conflict? What is gained or lost? __________
MGT 18: Essay #2 Cultural Competence and Global Teams / McKay
Scale #3: __________________________________________________________________________
Shared Preferences: _________________________________________________________________
Areas of Conflict: ___________________________________________________________________
Behavioral Solutions: ________________________________________________________________
What if there are no shared Preferences or no areas of Conflict? What is gained or lost? __________
3. How will you incorporate ideas from MEYER and EARLEY & MOSAKOWSKI (required readings) in your
discussion and analysis of your team’s experiences? This requires you to reference course readings when
the ideas of the authors are appropriate or relevant to your discussion.
a. ______________________________________________________________________________
b. ______________________________________________________________________________
c. ______________________________________________________________________________
4. Conclusion
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
7/1/2019 Whats Your Cultural Profile?
https://hbr.org/web/assessment/2014/08/whats-your-cultural-profile 1/3
ASSESSMENT
What’s Your Cultural Prole? -
Results
by Erin Meyer
You selected China as your nationality. Observe where you fall on each of the eight scales:
Communicating. This scale measures the degree to which a culture prefers low- or high-
context communication, a metric developed by anthropologist Edward Hall. In low-context
cultures (such as the U.S., Germany, and the Netherlands), good communication is precise,
simple, and explicit. Messages are expressed and understood at face value. Repetition and
written conrmation are appreciated, for clarity’s sake. In high-context cultures (such as
China, India, and France), communication is sophisticated, nuanced, and layered. Reading
between the lines is expected. Less is put in writing, and more is left to interpretation.
LOW-CONTEXT HIGH-CONTEXT
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
Evaluating. Often confused with the Communicating scale, Evaluating measures something
distinct: the relative preference for direct versus indirect criticism. The French, for example,
are high-context communicators relative to Americans yet are much more direct with
negative feedback. Spaniards and Mexicans are equally high-context communicators, but
the Spanish are much more direct than Mexicans when it comes to giving negative feedback.
DIRECT
NEGATIVE
FEEDBACK
INDIRECT
NEGATIVE
FEEDBACK
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
Persuading. This scale measures preference for principles-rst versus applications-rst
arguments (sometimes described as deductive versus inductive reasoning). People from
Germanic and southern European cultures usually nd it more persuasive to lay out generally
accepted principles before presenting an opinion or making a statement; American and
British managers typically lead with opinions or factual observations adding concepts later
javascript: window.print();
mailto:?to=&subject=What\%E2\%80\%99s\%20Your\%20Cultural\%20Profile\%3F&body=https\%3A\%2F\%2Fhbr.org\%2Fweb\%2Fassessment\%2F2014\%2F08\%2Fwhats-your-cultural-profile
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_T._Hall
7/1/2019 Whats Your Cultural Profile?
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British managers typically lead with opinions or factual observations, adding concepts later
to explain as necessary.
PRINCIPLES-
FIRST
APPLICATIONS-
FIRST
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
The norm for your culture is not plotted here, because it is neither principles-rst nor
applications-rst, but holistic.
Leading. This scale gauges the degree of respect and deference shown to authority gures,
on a spectrum between the egalitarian and the hierarchical. The former camp includes
Scandinavia and Israel, whereas China, Russia, Nigeria, and Japan are more hierarchical. The
metric builds on the concept of power distance, rst researched by Geert Hofstede, who
conducted 100,000 management surveys at IBM in the 1970s, and later researched by
Robert House and Mansour Javidan in their GLOBE Study of 62 Societies.
EGALITARIAN HIERARCHICAL
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
Deciding. We often assume that the most egalitarian cultures in the world are also the most
consensual, and that the most hierarchical ones are those where the boss makes top-down
decisions. That’s not always the case. The Japanese are strongly hierarchical but have one of
the most consensual cultures in the world. Germans are more hierarchical than Americans
but also more likely to make decisions through group consensus. This scale explores
dierences between building group agreement and relying on one person (usually the boss)
to make decisions.
CONSENSUAL TOP-DOWN
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
Trusting. This scale balances task-based trust (from the head) with relationship-based trust
(from the heart). In a task-based culture, such as the United States, the UK, or Germany,
trust is built through work: We collaborate well, we like each other’s work, and we are fond
of each other so I tr st o In a relationship based societ s ch as Bra il China or India
http://geert-hofstede.com/
http://www.inspireimagineinnovate.com/PDF/GLOBEsummary-by-Michael-H-Hoppe.pdf
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https://hbr.org/web/assessment/2014/08/whats-your-cultural-profile 3/3
of each other—so I trust you. In a relationship-based society, such as Brazil, China, or India,
trust is built by weaving personal, aective connections: We have laughed together, have
shared time relaxing together, and have come to know each other at a deep, personal level
—so I trust you. Many scholars, such as Roy Chua and Michael Morris, have researched this
topic.
TASK-BASED RELATIONSHIP-
BASED
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
Disagreeing. Everyone knows that a little confrontation is healthy, right? The recent U.S.
business literature certainly conrms that viewpoint, but dierent cultures have varying
ideas about how productive it is. People in Indonesia, Japan, and Thailand view the public
airing of disagreement very dimly, whereas those in Germany, France, and the Netherlands
are quite comfortable with it. This scale measures how you view confrontation—whether you
feel it is likely to improve group dynamics or to harm relationships within a team.
CONFRONTATIONAL AVOIDS
CONFRONTATION
HOW YOU SCORED NORM FOR YOUR CULTURE
h d li ll b i f ll i bl b i di il d l l
http://portal.idc.ac.il/en/schools/business/conference-managing-change/documents/michael-morris.pdf
1
MGT 18: MANAGING DIVERSE TEAMS
Table of Contents for Assigned Readings
PROFESSOR: Mary A. McKay
SUMMER I AND II 2016
All bolded items are in the reader. Others can be found via links embedded here and via TED (see
Content folders by WEEK).
CLASS 1: THE BUSINESS CASE FOR DIVERSITY
1. Page, Scott E., “Making the Difference: Applying a Logic of Diversity.” Academy of Management
Perspectives (2007, November).
2. Banaji, M. R., Bazerman, M. H., & Chugh, D. (2003, December). “How (Un) Ethical Are You?” Harvard
Business Publishing Product #R0312D-PDF-ENG (skim for CLASS 1 but read thoroughly before CLASS 2)
3. Goldsmith, M. (2010, June 16). “Learn to Embrace the Tension of Diversity.”
http://blogs.hbr.org/goldsmith/2010/06/learn_to_embrace_the_tension_o.html
CLASS 2: SOCIAL IDENTITY THEORY: UNDERSTANDING INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR IN GROUPS AND TEAMS
4. Davidson, M. N. (2002, August). “Primer on Social Identity: Understanding Group Membership.”
Harvard Business Publishing Product #: UV0644-PDF-ENG
5. Sucher, S. J. (2007, November). “Differences at Work: The Individual Experience.” Harvard Business
Publishing Product # 608068-PDF-ENG
6. Sucher, S. J. (2007, November). “Social Identity Profile.” Harvard Business Publishing Product # 608091-
PDF-ENG
7. Ely, R. J., Vargas, I. (2004, December). “Managing a Public Image: Kevin Knight.” Harvard Business
Publishing Product # 405053-PDF-ENG
8. Polzer, J. T., Elfenbein, H. A. (2003, February). “Identity Issues in Teams.” Harvard Business School
Product # 403095-PDF-ENG
1
17
25
29
35
37
41
2
CLASS 3: AN INTRODUCTION TO GROUPS AND TEAMS
9. Katzenbach, Jon R., Smith, Douglas K. (2005, July). “The Discipline of Teams.” Harvard Business
Publishing Product # R0507P-PDF-ENG
10. Hackman, J. (2011, June 7). “Six Common Misperceptions About Team Work.”
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2011/06/six_common_misperceptions_abou.html
11. Coutu, D., & Beschloss, M. (2009, May). “Why Teams Dont Work.” Harvard Business Publishing Product
# R0905H-PDF-ENG
12. Huckman, R. S. and Staats, B. R. (2013, December). “The Hidden Benefits of Keeping Teams Intact.”
Harvard Business Publishing Product # F1312A-PDF-ENG
CLASS 4: UNDERSTAND BEFORE YOU ARE UNDERSTOOD: ESSENTIAL SKILLS FOR TEAM MEMBERSHIP
13. Edmondson, A. C. & Roloff, K. S. (2009, September). “Leveraging Diversity Through Psychological
Safety.” Harvard Business Publishing Product # ROT093-PDF-ENG.
14. Davidson, M. N. (2001). “Listening.” Darden Business Publishing Product # UVA-OB-0736.
15. Rosh, L. and Offermann, L. (2013, October). “Be Yourself, But Carefully.” Harvard Business Publishing
Product # R1310J-PDF-ENG
16. Connor, Jeffrey C. “It Wasn’t About Race. Or Was It?” Harvard Business Publishing # R00502-PDF-ENG.
CLASS 5: INTELLIGENCES: EMOTIONAL, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL
17. Goleman, Daniel (2004, January). “What Makes a Leader?” Harvard Business Publishing Product #
R0401H-PDF-ENG
18. Ross, Judith A. (2004, December). “Make Your Good Team Great.” Harvard Business Publishing Product
# U0812B-PDF-ENG
19. Goleman, D. & Boyatzis, R. (2008, September). “Social Intelligence and the Biology of Leadership.”
Harvard Business Publishing Product # R0809E-PDF-ENG
20. Earley, P. C. & Mosakowski, E. (2004, October). “Cultural Intelligence.” Harvard Business Publishing
Product # R0410J-PDF-ENG
51
61
69
73
79
87
93
101
113
115
123
Administrator
高亮
3
CLASS 6: MIDTERM AND VIRTUAL/REMOTE TEAMS
21. Siebdrat, F., Hoegl, M., Ernst, H. (2009, July). “How to Manage Virtual Teams.” Harvard Business
Publishing Product # SMR322-PDF-ENG (CLASS 6 reading is covered on the final exam, not the midterm.)
CLASS 7: LEADING 21ST CENTURY TEAMS
22. Cardona, P. & Miller, Paddy. (2004, July). “Leadership in Work Teams.” Harvard Business Publishing
Product # IES087-PDF-ENG
23. Sitkin, S. B. & Hackman, J.R. “Developing Team Leadership: An Interview With Coach Mike Krzyzewski.”
Academy of Management Learning & Education, 2011, Vol. 10, No. 3, 494–501.
24. Useem, Michael. (2001, October). “Leadership Lessons of Mount Everest.” Harvard Business Publishing
Product # R0109B-PDF-ENG
25. Gallo, A. (2010, June 9). “Get Your Team to Stop Fighting and Start Working.”
http://blogs.hbr.org/hmu/2010/06/get-your-team-to-stop-fighting.html
26. Ellington-Booth, B. & Cates, K. L., “Growing Managers: Moving From Team Member to Team Leader.”
Harvard Business Publishing Product # KEL629-PDF-ENG.
CLASS 8: CULTURAL COMPETENCE
27. Corkindale, G. (2007, June 14). “Navigating Cultures.”
http://blogs.hbr.org/corkindale/2007/06/navigating_cultures.html
28. Brett, J. Behfar, K., Kern, M.C. (2006, November). “Managing Multicultural Teams.” Harvard Business
Publishing Product # R0611-PDF-ENG
29. Meyer, Erin (2014, May). “Navigating the Cultural Minefield.” Harvard Business Publishing Product #
R1405K-PDF-ENG
30. Meyer, Erin (2014, February). “How to Say This is Crap in Different Cultures.”
https://hbr.org/2014/02/how-to-say-this-is-crap-in-different-cultures/
31. Meyer, Erin. (2014, July). “Multicultural Teamwork: Accommodate Multiple Perspectives.”
http://knowledge.insead.edu/blog/insead-blog/multicultural-teamwork-accommodate-multiple-
perspectives-3489
131
137
157
165
173
185
193
Administrator
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CLASS 9: THE FUTURE OF TEAMS
32. Pentland, A. (2012, April). “The New Science of Building Great Teams.” Harvard Business School Product
# R1204C-PDF-ENG
33. Edmondson, A. (2012, April). “Teamwork on the Fly.” Harvard Business Publishing Product # R1204D-
PDF-ENG
34. Duhigg, C. “What Google Learned From Its Quest to Build the Perfect Team” (February 25, 2016).
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/magazine/what-google-learned-from-its-quest-to-build-the-
perfect-team.html?_r=0
CLASS 10: BECOMING A GLOBAL TEAM LEADER
35. Groysberg, B. and Connolly, K. (September 2013). “Great Leaders Who Make the Mix Work.” Harvard
Business Publishing Product # R1309D-PDF-ENG
36. Klau, M. “Twenty-first Century Leadership: It’s All About Values” (May 27, 2010).
http://blogs.hbr.org/imagining-the-future-of-leadership/2010/05/whose-values-the-gandhihitler.html
*Permission to reprint all selections granted to University Readers by the publishers for this individual course reader.
Please don’t photocopy – to do so would be a violation of copyright law.
199
211
221
E X C H A N G E
Making the Difference: Applying a Logic of
Diversity
by Scott E. Page
Executive Overview
Each year, corporations spend billions of dollars on diversity training, education, and outreach. In this
article, I explain why these efforts make good business sense and why organizations with diverse employees
often perform best. I do this by describing a logic of diversity that relies on simple frameworks. Within these
frameworks, I demonstrate how collections of individuals with diverse tools can outperform collections of
high “ability” individuals at problem solving and predictive tasks. In problem solving, these benefits come
not through portfolio effects but from superadditivity: Combinations of tools can be more powerful than the
tools themselves. In predictive tasks, diversity in predictive models reduces collective error. It’s a mathe-
matical fact that diversity matters just as much as highly accurate models when making collective
predictions. This logic of diversity provides a foundation on which to construct practices that leverage
differences to improve performance.
A
long the moving sidewalks inside Paris’
Charles de Gaulle airport, you cannot help
but notice a sequence of HSBC advertise-
ments meant to show diverse perspectives. One
shows two identical pictures of a half-full glass of
water. Across one glass, the caption reads moitié
vide, under the other moitié plein. A second adver-
tisement shows two identical pictures of an apple
with a bite taken out. Défendu scrolls across one
apple and recommandé across the other. These ads
encourage us to think of HSBC as a firm that sees
a problem from more than one perspective—and
they also provide a welcome diversion from the
inefficiencies of the airport. This multiple per-
spective taking allows HSBC to add value, or so
we are intended to believe.
The HSBC ads reflect a broader trend. Each
year, corporations spend billions related to pro-
moting positive messages about diversity both in-
ternally and externally. Why profit-seeking busi-
nesses commit so many resources to constructing
diverse workforces and creating welcoming orga-
nizational cultures stems from two trends. First,
businesses have become more global and hence
more ethnically diverse. Firms sell to diverse con-
sumers and hire from a diverse pool of candidates.
The world, as has been said, is now flat, and
consequently, organizations must cope with diver-
sity. Second, the practice of work has become
more team focused. The fixed hierarchy has given
way to the evolving matrix (Mannix & Neale,
2006). In the past, welders positioned two stations
apart on an assembly line need not get along.
They need not validate one another’s worldview.
The same cannot be said of a team of scriptwriters
or oncologists, who must learn to understand the
language and actions of one another.
This article is adapted from Scott E. Page’s book The Difference: How
the Power of Diversity Creates Better Groups, Firms, Schools, and Societies,
published in 2007 by Princeton University Press.
Scott E. Page ([email protected]) is Professor of Complex Systems, Political Science, and Economics at the University of Michigan-Ann
Arbor. He is also an external faculty member of the Santa Fe Institute.
6 NovemberAcademy of Management Perspectives
Copyright by the Academy of Management; all rights reserved. Contents may not be copied, e-mailed, posted to a listserv, or otherwise transmitted without the copyright holder’s express written
permission. Users may print, download, or e-mail articles for individual use only.
1
This course pack is for use in Professor McKay’s MGT 18 Summer 2016 course. Further reproduction is prohibited.
This coincident emergence of diverse work-
forces and team-based work makes leveraging di-
versity a central concern of most organizations. A
first question to ask is whether it’s a good thing
from a business perspective. Does it hurt or help
the bottom line? A substantial empirical literature
addresses the question of whether diversity im-
proves team performance (Williams & O’Reilly,
1998). A brief summary of that literature reveals
that the answer depends on several factors. Par-
ticularly important is what people believe (Ely &
Thomas, 2001). If people do not believe in the
value of diversity, then when part of a diverse
team they’re not as likely to produce good out-
comes. That expectations shape behavior and that
behavior shapes outcomes should not come as a
big surprise. How though to change expectations?
How does an organization get its employees to
believe that diversity leads to better outcomes?
Taking out advertisements or printing up human
resources documents with elaborate graphics and
catchy tag lines won’t make it so. Managers and
employees need, to quote Springsteen, “a reason
to believe.”
Simple, clean logic can provide that reason. In
this brief article, I derive links between cognitive
differences among team members and better col-
lective outcomes at specific tasks: problem solving
and prediction. I build those links using conceptual
frameworks that borrow from psychology, com-
puter science, and economics. These links not
only provide a foundation for understanding
when, how, and if diversity produces benefits—
the reason to believe—they also point toward
specific policies and practices that can leverage
the power of diversity.
The bottom line: Diversity can improve the
bottom line. It may even matter as much as abil-
ity.
Diverse Perspectives and Heuristics
I
begin by formalizing the loose notion of a per-
spective. No end of brochures and advertisements
sing the praises of diverse perspectives, but what
are they? Here, I define a perspective to be a
representation of the set of the possible: the set of
the semiconductor designs, welfare policies, or fall
leather coats. Two people possess diverse perspec-
tives if they mentally represent the “set of the
possible” differently. For example, one person
might organize a collection of books by their au-
thors’ last names; another person might organize
those same books by color and size. One professor
might arrange students’ names by class rank; an-
other professor might order those same students
alphabetically.
How a person represents the set of the possible
determines “what is next to what.” For example,
The Catcher in the Rye may seem rather discon-
nected from Mao’s Little Red Book, but they are
adjacent in a perspective that organizes books by
color and size. Perspectives matter because “what
is next to what” determines how a person locates
new solutions. The linkage between perspectives
and locating solutions can be clarified with an
example. Suppose you are making butternut
squash soup. You’ve pureed the sautéed onion and
added the cream and baked squash, but the result
tastes bland. Arrayed before you is an enormous
spice rack. You’re thinking that perhaps you’ll add
cumin. You sniff the cumin. It smells fine, but
next to it, you see curry. So you smell the curry
and decide it will be wonderful. You only try the
curry because it sits adjacent to the cumin. Had
the spices been arranged differently, say by color,
you might have added cinnamon instead. What is
next to what—in this case curry is next to
cumin— determines where you look.
This same logic extends to almost any problem-
solving situation: Two people with different perspec-
tives test different potential improvements and increase
the probability of an innovation.
Diverse perspectives may be the cause of most
breakthroughs, but this does not mean that all
diverse perspectives prove helpful. Someone who
sees a problem from a different perspective will
notice different candidate solutions. But those can-
didate solutions need not improve the status quo.
Diverse perspectives prove most valuable if they
embed information relevant to the problem being
solved. For example, in trying to increase fuel
efficiency, a perspective that focuses on the
weight of parts will likely yield good ideas. A
perspective that considers their color probably
won’t. Therefore, while organizations should en-
courage bringing diverse perspectives to a prob-
2007 7Page
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This course pack is for use in Professor McKay’s MGT 18 Summer 2016 course. Further reproduction is prohibited.
lem, they must also have some method for iden-
tifying useful perspectives.
Perspectives describe how people see a prob-
lem, but they do not fully capture the act of
problem solving. When solving problems, people
also use heuristics. Heuristics are methods or tools
to find solutions. In my description of searching
for a spice to add to the soup, I’ve assumed that
you looked at adjacent jars. This is an example of
a heuristic. Heuristics take many forms and vary in
their sophistication from simple rules of thumb to
complicated algorithms. To give a flavor for how
heuristics operate, I describe here a famous simple
heuristic known as do the opposite. In a classic
episode of the television show Seinfeld, Jerry’s
bumbling friend George Costanza comes to the
realization that every decision he has made in his
life has been the wrong one. This realization re-
sults in an epiphany: He should do the opposite. He
should do the reverse of whatever he thinks is
best. If the rules in his head tell him to be kind, he
should be rude. If they tell him to arrive early, he
should show up late. If they tell him to dress
casually, he should dress formally. The irony, of
course, is that doing the opposite of what he
thinks is right is the only “right” thing George has
ever done, and by the end of the show he achieves
personal and professional success. Diverse heuris-
tics, like diverse perspectives, improve problem
solving, but they do so in a different way.
Whereas perspectives change “what is next to
what,” heuristics change how a person searches for
solutions. Imagine two engineers working for a
manufacturing company trying to improve the
speed of an assembly line. The first engineer’s
heuristic might be to try to break down individual
tasks into smaller tasks. The second engineer’s
heuristic may be to switch the order of the tasks.
The two heuristics differ, and because they differ,
they identify different candidate solutions, in-
creasing the probability of a breakthrough.
This brief description of diverse perspectives
and heuristics and how they operate reveals only
part of the power of diversity. What I’ve shown is
that by seeing problems differently (diverse per-
spectives) and by looking for solutions in different
ways (diverse heuristics), teams, groups, and orga-
nizations can locate more potential innovations. I
now show that these individual improvements can
be combined, creating superadditivity. Superaddi-
tivity exists when the total exceeds the sum of the
parts, when 1�1 � 3.
The idea that 1�1 � 3 may seem counterin-
tuitive. Yet, when we add heuristics, either the
two heuristics are the same (i.e., each points to
the same solution, and therefore 1�1 � 1) or the
two heuristics differ (in which case 1�1 � 3).
Why three? Let’s do the math. Let’s go back to our
assembly line problem. The first heuristic might
advocate dividing a task that consists of six spot
welds into two tasks. The second heuristic might
advocate gluing on a piece of trim prior to the
welding. The third heuristic comes from doing
both— dividing the task and switching the order.
Thus, any time you have two heuristics, you can
create a third by combining the two heuristics. A
similar logic shows that 1�1�1 � 7. Far from
being a meaningless buzzword, superadditivity can
be real, but only if people bring diverse perspec-
tives and solutions to a problem.
The logic that diversity creates superadditive
benefits differs from the standard portfolio analogy
for diversity. According to the portfolio analogy, a
firm wants diversity so as to be able to respond to
diverse situations just as a stock investor wants a
diverse portfolio of stocks. Just as a diverse port-
folio guarantees a good payoff regardless of the
state of the world, a diverse set of employees
ensures that someone exists within the firm to
handle any situation that arises. The portfolio
analogy, though accurate in some cases, breaks
down when applied to team-based problem solv-
ing. There’s no give and take between stocks in
a portfolio. One stock doesn’t say to another
stock, “I never thought of the problem that
way.” Nor can stocks build on solutions thought
of by existing stocks. That just doesn’t make any
sense.
I do not mean to imply that diversity does not
provide insurance as suggested by the portfolio
analogy. It does. However, the value of insurance
against risk should not obscure the potentially
larger superadditive benefits that accrue from hav-
ing employees with diverse perspectives and heu-
ristics.
Before moving on to more theoretical results, I
8 NovemberAcademy of Management Perspectives
3
This course pack is for use in Professor McKay’s MGT 18 Summer 2016 course. Further reproduction is prohibited.
want to inject a brief comment about identity
diversity. In the framework that I have described,
diverse perspectives and heuristics underpin diver-
sity’s benefits. These more cognitively based no-
tions of differences are distinct from identity-
based distinctions such as race, gender, age,
ethnicity, and so on. Though conceptually dis-
tinct, cognitive and identity diversity often corre-
late empirically. This correlation arises because
perspectives and heuristics that people apply to
problems do not come from thin air. They are the
product of training, practice, and life experiences.
How we see the world is informed and influenced
by our values, our identities, and our cultures.
People often reason by analogy. Each person’s
unique set of life experiences provides the engine
for these analogies. Diverse identities, therefore,
often translate into diverse perspectives and heu-
ristics.
Problem Solving: Diversity Trumps Ability
I
have just outlined the basic logic for how di-
verse perspectives and heuristics can improve
problem solving. I now want to push this logic a
little further and touch on some formal results.
First, I want to describe some experiments that I
ran while an assistant professor at Caltech. For
fun, I constructed a computer model of diverse
problem solvers confronting a difficult problem. In
my model, I represented diversity as differences in
the ways problem solvers encoded the problem
and searched for solutions, i.e., diverse perspectives
and heuristics. I then stumbled upon a counterin-
tuitive finding: Diverse groups of problem solv-
ers— groups of people with diverse perspectives
and heuristics— consistently outperformed groups
composed of the best individual performers. So,
if I formed two groups— one random (and
therefore diverse) and one consisting of the best
individual performers—the first group almost
always did better. In other words, diversity
trumped ability.
This counterintuitive finding led me to try to
identify sufficient conditions for this to be true.
What assumptions did I have to make for diverse
groups, on average, to outperform groups of the
best individuals? That turned out to be a rather
difficult task. So, following the logic of my own
model, I enlisted the help of someone else, Lu
Hong, a person with a different set of perspectives
and heuristics than my own, to help me identify
those conditions. Together, we found a set of
conditions that, if they hold, imply that diversity
trumps ability.
To show what these conditions are and why
they matter, I will describe a simple model. Sup-
pose that I begin with an initial pool of problem
solvers from which I draw a random (e.g., diverse)
team and a team of the best individual problem
solvers. Each of these teams will have some mod-
erate number of people, whereas the initial pool of
people could be quite large. It could consist of
everyone who works for a firm or every faculty
member at a university. I then compare the col-
lective performance of the team of the best prob-
lem solvers against the collective performance of
the randomly selected problem solvers.
Before I go too far, I want to remind you of the
goal. Keep in mind that the diversity-trumps-abil-
ity result won’t always hold. It holds given certain
conditions. If, for example, the teams have only a
single member, the team of the best problem solv-
ers will consist of the best individual, and the
team of random problem solvers will consist of a
random person. Therefore, the first team will out-
perform the second. Of course, in this case ability
doesn’t trump diversity because the second team
isn’t diverse. It has only one person. Thus, having
the teams have more than one person will be a
condition for the result to hold.
The question Lu and I asked was, what other
conditions are needed? If those conditions are
unrealistic, then we should not expect diversity to
trump ability in practice. If those conditions seem
mild, then perhaps we should. That’s one reason
that we “do the math,” so that we can see when
logic holds and when it doesn’t. Doing the math
has other benefits as well, not the least of which is
that we better understand how diversity produces
benefits, which better enables us to leverage it in
practice.
The first condition we identified relates to the
difficulty of the problem. Easy problems don’t
require diverse approaches.
2007 9Page
4
This course pack is for use in Professor McKay’s MGT 18 Summer 2016 course. Further reproduction is prohibited.
Condition 1: The Problem Is Difficult: No individual
problem solver always locates the best solution.1
Without this condition, diversity cannot trump
ability. If any individual problem solver always
finds the best solution, then the collection of the
best problem solvers (which by definition con-
tains the best problem solver) always locates the
best solution. For example, if we need to find the
answer to a standard engineering problem, we can
just ask an engineer who can give us the correct
answer. We have no need to put together an
interdisciplinary team. For harder problems, like
designing an aircraft engine, we need a team. And
that team needs diverse thinkers.
Condition 2: The Calculus Condition: The local
optima of every problem solver can be written down in a
list. In other words, all problem solvers are smart.
The second condition concerns the ability of the
problem solvers. All of the possible problem solv-
ers must have some ability to solve the problem.
We cannot set loose a bunch of anthropologists
and economists in the physics lab and hope they
produce cold fusion. To formalize the idea that the
problem solvers must have relevant cognitive
tools, Lu and I assumed that the problem solvers
got stuck in only a reasonable number of places. In
the language of mathematics, such points are
called local optima. We decided to call this restric-
tion the Calculus Condition. We did this because
people who know calculus can take derivatives,
and therefore have a reasonable number of local
optima. Here’s why. Think of a problem as creat-
ing a mathematical function in which high values
are good solutions. The derivative equals the slope
of that function, which like the slope of a moun-
tain is either positive (uphill), negative (down-
hill), or zero (on a peak or a plateau). On a peak
the derivative equals zero; the slope goes neither
up nor down. Calculus enables a person to find
points with derivatives equal to zero. Therefore,
people who know calculus can find peaks. Econ-
omists don’t know calculus when it comes to phys-
ics, but they probably do know calculus when
asked about tax policy.
Condition 3: The Diversity Condition: Any solution
other than the global optimum is not a local optimum for
some non-zero percentage of problem solvers.
The third condition requires that for any proposed
solution other than the global optimum, some
problem solver can find an improvement on that
solution. In formal terms, this means that the
intersection of the problem solvers’ local optima
contains only the global optimum. We call this
the Diversity Condition, as it assumes diversity
among the problem solvers. This condition does
not say that given any solution some problem
solver can immediately jump to the global opti-
mum. That assumption would be much stronger
and would rarely be the case. The assumption says,
instead, that some problem exists who can find an
improvement. That improvement need not be
large. It need only be an improvement.
Condition 4: Reasonably Sized Teams Drawn from
Lots of Potential Problem Solvers: The initial
population of problem solvers must be large, and the
teams of problem solvers working together must consist
of more than a handful of problem solvers.
The final condition requires that the initial pool
of problem solvers must be reasonably large and
that the set of problem solvers who form the teams
must not be too small. The logic behind this
condition becomes clear in extreme cases. If the
initial set consists of only 15 problem solvers, then
the best ten should outperform a random ten.
With so few problem solvers, the best ten cannot
help but be diverse and therefore have different
local optima. At the same time, the teams that
work together must be large enough that the ran-
dom collection can be sufficiently diverse. Think
of it this way: We need to be selecting people from
a big pool, and we need to be constructing teams
that are big enough for diversity to come into play.
These four conditions—(a) the problem has to
be hard, (b) the people have to be smart, (c) the
people have to be diverse, and (d) the teams have
to be reasonably big and chosen from a large
pool—prove sufficient for diversity to trump abil-
1 If the best problem solver finds the optimal solution 99.9\% of the
time, the collection of randomly selected problem solvers will not outper-
form the group of the best.
10 NovemberAcademy of Management Perspectives
5
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