âHow was everything?â Yeah, good.
No doubt youâve had countless such exchanges when finishing up brunch at a local cafe.
And no doubt you still said âyeah, goodâ (or something slightly more eloquent), even though the eggs were runny, there was about one-fifth of the advertised sujuk sausage on your plate, and you left hungry after dropping $30 on what appeared to be $5 worth of ingredients.
There are several evolutionary reasons we say âyeah, goodâ rather than give the waiter or waitress an honest assessment.
This would have meant imminent death on the African savannah tens of thousands of years ago, and despite the fact that it is now 2020, we are still imbued with innate behaviours that served us well many, many moons ago.
Conserving energy was fundamental to survival on the savannah because your next meal wasnât exactly around the corner at the Circle K. When it comes to brunch, itâs just so much easier to nonchalantly declare that the food was fine (even though you might never return to said cafe) than it is to be honest and create conflict. This brings me to the third point.
We humans avoid conflict, because from an evolutionary standpoint, positive experiences (like finding some berries) were nice, but negative ones (like finding a member of an opposing tribe) often meant death. Research has found that we remember negative events and hold on to them much longer than positive ones. Therefore, we are prone to a negativity bias, and we optimise for less negative experiences than more positive ones.
Of course, our tens of thousands of years-strong biological predispositions arenât isolated to our cafe visits â they permeate our lives, and our work.
This tendency to say âyeah, goodâ is a dangerous one that entrepreneurs seeking feedback for their products must wrestle with, and employers seeking feedback for their employees must tackle.
When it comes to providing references for past employees who may have been less than stellar, additional factors come into play above and beyond our evolutionary wiring.
Numerous studies show that when we help other people, it improves our own life satisfaction. âWe feel good about ourselves when weâre doing good to and for othersâ, says Dr. Tim Sharp, who is affectionately known as, âDr. Happyâ. This is why volunteering is often prescribed to people who are suffering from anxiety or depression.
Second, with the passage of time, itâs easy to look at the past through rose-colored glasses, and yearn for âthe good olâ daysâ.
But, as legendary physicist, Richard Feynman, put it when reflecting on his getting back together with an ex, âWhen youâre away and youâve got nothing but paper and youâre feeling lonely, you remember all the good things and you canât remember the reasons you had the arguments. And it didnât work out. The argument started again right away and the marriage lasted for only two yearsâ. So too it is with bad employees.
Finally, whatâs the downside for the referee â the person giving the reference? There is none. They can carry on with their lives without too much bother, regardless of the nature of their reference.
As is the case with Yelp or Amazon reviews, the reviews often say more about the reviewer than they do about the reviewed.
This echoes the concept of Wittgensteinâs Ruler, named after 20th century philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein â âUnless you have confidence in the rulerâs reliability, if you use a ruler to measure a table, you may also be using the table to measure the rulerââ.
With so many factors working against people providing an honest and fair reference, itâs difficult to trust what people say.
So how might we counter this?
It all comes down to the quality of our questions.
Rather than asking closed Yes/No questions, such as âwould you re-hire them?â, youâll want to ask open-ended questions such as âwhat was their contribution to X project?â, or more to the point, âcan you give me three reasons why I shouldnât hire them?â to elicit more meaningful information from referees.
To bring this full circle, if I ran a cafe I would be telling my wait staff to intersperse a few âwhatâs one thing that could have been better about your meal (or experience) today?â questions into their day, and then capture it in a central logbook or spreadsheet.
Over a period of days or weeks, patterns would emerge that would give us valuable information about what really needs to change, and what could be improved.
As others have said before me, the quality of your life is a reflection of the quality of your questions. Ask wisely.
Steve Glaveski is on a mission to unlock your potential to do your best work and live your best life. He is the founder of innovation accelerator, Collective Campus, author of several books, including Employee to Entrepreneur and Time Rich, and productivity contributor for Harvard Business Review. Heâs a chronic autodidact and is into everything from 80s metal and high-intensity workouts to attempting to surf and hold a warrior three pose.