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Behavioral Matters: Insights from the application of Behavioral Finance Issue 20 – June 15, 2010 Behavioral Matters is a series of essays on the application of Behavioral Finance written specifically for professional investors and portfolio managers. Processing Success But over time more thoughtful decision-making will lead to better overall results, and more thoughtful decision-making can be encouraged by evaluating decisions on how well they were made rather than on the outcome. Robert Rubin, Harvard University commencement address, 2001 Managers should love their process, not the stocks they hold: This is the wisdom handed down by great investors over the ages. The more defined and effective the process, and the more it is adhered to, the better and more repeatable the decisions. Yet evidence suggests that process is not implemented to the same degree that it is talked about. This essay discusses the nature of mistakes and how to avoid them by using a checklist. Mistakes Happen The nature of errors in professional decision-making was pondered by philosophers Samuel Gorovitz and Alasdair MacIntyre. 1 Ignorance and ineptitude were the primary reasons for mistakes, according to their theory. Ignorance refers to decisions made without benefit of pertinent knowledge, whereas ineptitude concerns not using all the knowledge available—that is, poor discipline. It turns out that we are much more tolerant toward mistakes of the first type than the second. In practice, managers are not expected to anticipate every market correction, but they are expected to follow their process when making investment decisions. Perhaps ferreting out ineptitude is an unconscious motivation behind the intense probing by clients and their consultants in the aftermath of poor performance. It’s Complicated Knowing more makes us smarter and, at the same time, makes managing what we know ever more difficult. Physician and Harvard Professor Atul Gawande, who has studied highly skilled decisionmaking under stress, points out: “Know-how and sophistication have increased remarkably across almost all our realms of endeavor, and as a result so has our struggle to deliver on them.” 2 Expert investment coach Lawrence Evans puts a finer point on this topic: “I have studied experts in a number of areas—race car drivers, surgeons, marketing professionals, portfolio managers, and the like. They are all smart, yet they often succumb to the inexorable infiltration of complexity compounded by innovation.”3 Evans and his team of coaches work exclusively with portfolio managers, and they regularly see practice fall short of intent. “These often truly brilliant managers know their process and can explain them very articulately, but they don’t always follow them as they go about their typical day,” Evans explains. A major reason for poor adherence to process, he says, is due to the process itself: “It’s often a conceptual model of how decisions should be made rather than simple steps that can be followed.”4 Inconsistent or underwhelming performance is the cost borne when intention and action differ. Steps to Success Decision-making processes are being strengthened dramatically in many professions with the help of a simple tool—the checklist. Prosaic as they might seem, these pithy lists are helping professionals improve their performance in all manner of skilled activity from saving lives to protecting fortunes. Pilots have long used checklists. They understand that the complexity associated with flying can lead to mistakes, and even minor errors must be avoided. Surgeons around the world 2 increasingly use checklists to reduce manageable errors. As Dr. Gawande explains, checklists are needed because “[y]ou see increasing mistakes … in almost any endeavor requiring mastery of complexity and of large amounts of knowledge.” 5 Simple, wellconceived lists enable top professionals to more consistently deliver their best results, according to a study he and fellow researchers completed for the World Health Organization. Professional investors are also improving their performance with checklists. Lawrence Evans finds that the majority of his clients embrace checklists as they complete his intense coaching experience. According to Evans, “Conviction is a powerful reason for buying or owning a share … but results improve when you know why you have the conviction. It’s why I recommend a conviction checklist. The purpose of it is to be consciously aware of why you are making this decision [buy, sell, or hold] and also to consider how you are feeling at the moment it’s being made.”6 Evans believes that faithfully jotting down reasons for conviction as decisions are being made is one of the best ways to learn about your real investment process. And this feedback can go right back into strengthening process and decisionmaking. Less Downside, More Upside Avoiding mistakes of ineptitude is just one way process improves performance. Assuring that each decision reflects, or is compared to, the rigor you’ve set for yourself is the way process enables managers to build a stronger floor to their investing. In explaining how checklists strengthen processes, Atul Gawande suggests: “They provide a kind of cognitive net. They catch mental flaws inherent in all of us, flaws of memory and attention and thoroughness.” 7 Equally important is the fact that process can enable managers to invoke their intuition and creative thinking more powerfully. Extreme situations sometimes require innovative solutions. Piloting through uncharted waters has historically been the exclusive domain of the most senior decision maker—the portfolio manager. Unfortunately, being left to one’s own mental abilities at such moments can compound rather than resolve problems. The stress experienced during extreme moments limits creativity or can be just plain debilitating. A more robust approach for confronting a crisis, while smack in its midst, is to follow your process. That entails developing a crisis management process before it’s needed. It involves thinking broadly through what information you’ll need, from whom, and what authority each person will have to act; and codifying all this information into a series of steps that can spring into action when needed. It can be your “When the *?#! hits the fan” checklist. The purpose is to cause you to pause, stay objective, and get the facts available to do your best when you might be feeling your worst. 3 Conclusion Delivering consistent performance requires more than skill and intuition. Coach Evans offers this keen observation: “Let’s not forget that while intellectual superiority can help investing, it’s always trumped by superior processes. In fact, behind every legendary investor, you’ll find a checklist that is ruthlessly followed.”8 The challenge is to go beyond believing that process is important and to make it part of your daily reality. Clear and observable process, with or without checklists, enables you to make decisions in line with intentions, guides creative problem solving, and supports more effective learning. The alternative might find you delivering results that are, well, listless. Notes 1. Samuel Gorovitz and Alasdair MacIntyre, “Toward a Theory of Medical Fallibility,” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 1, no. 1 (1976). 2. Atul A. Gawande, The Checklist Manifesto (New York: Henry Holt, 2009). 3. Lawrence Evans, Oxygen Coaching, Ltd., exclusive interview with Cabot Research LLC, May 28, 2010. Learn more about Oxygen Coaching at http://investing. businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=1 04484229. 4. Ibid. 5. Gawande, The Checklist Manifesto. 6. Evans, interview with Cabot Research, May 28, 2010. 7. Gawande, The Checklist Manifesto. 8. Evans, interview with Cabot Research, May 28, 2010. Further Reading Dr. Sunil Eappen, Chief of Anesthesiology, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, exclusive interview with Cabot Research LLC, June 8, 2010. (The MEEI introduced surgical checklists throughout their hospital on June 7, 2010, under the leadership of Dr. Eappen.) 4