Business & Psychology
A decision flops, a deadline slips, a plan fails — and suddenly everyone “knew” it would happen. But did they? Or are we rewriting the past to protect our pride? In this episode, Martin Wolf and Dr. Verena Seibert-Giller explore Hindsight Bias, the brain’s sneaky habit of altering memories once an outcome is known. It feels harmless — but it quietly undermines accountability, distorts learning, and poisons feedback culture. They dive into: – Why we mistake outcome clarity for past insight – How hindsight bias makes leaders overconfident (and team members hesitant) – The risk of punishing others for what wasn’t knowable at the time – Why complex systems (like startups or politics) are especially vulnerable – A concrete reflection hack to track knowledge as it evolves This episode helps you separate memory from reality, protect psychological safety in post-mortems, and replace shallow blame with better decision hygiene — especially when things go wrong.
12 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Business & Psychology!