One way or another, I’m sure you are all
familiar with the Dunning-Kruger
effect. You might have heard
about it under the label of
confident idiots,
describing a behaviour of an unskilled
individual being unaware of the lack of
a specific skill, instead assuming to
have a skill-level that is even superior
to the experts in the field. If you look
around in your environment, family,
friends, colleagues, you can probably
spot the one or the other individual who
would seem like a role model for
Dunning-Kruger.
In
1999, while a professor at Cornell,
David Dunning joined Justin Kruger to
co-author a paper titled “Unskilled and Unaware
of It: How Difficulties in
Recognizing One’s Own Incompetence
Lead to Inflated
Self-Assessments”, based on
studies indicating that people who are
incompetent in an area are typically too
incompetent to know they are
incompetent. Or, simply put, we are
often in a position where we don’t know
what we don’t know, and therefore cannot
judge our level of expertise in a
particular area.
This effect or bias, is also known as the
‘Lake Wobegon effect’, or ‘illusory
superiority’, and is closely tied to the
Peter Principle. Donald Rumsfeld put it
this way:
There are known knowns; there are
things we know we know. We also know
there are known unknowns; that is to
say we know there are some things we
do not know. But there are also
unknown unknowns — the ones we don’t
know we don’t know. And if one looks
throughout the history of our
country and other free countries, it
is the latter category that tend to
be the difficult ones.
And in John Cleese’s words, stupid
people do not have the capability to
realize how stupid they are.
The story of how Dunning came up with the
D-K Effect is an amusing one. He read
about an unusual bank robbery that
occurred in Pittsburgh. What was unusual
was that the robber, McArthur Wheeler,
made absolutely no effort to disguise
himself, and in fact, looked and smiled
directly into the security cameras. Yet,
he was surprised to quickly be arrested,
telling authorities “…but I used
the juice!”.
The juice?
Wheeler told the police that they
couldn’t arrest him based on the
security videos, as wearing lemon juice,
he was of course invisible. He had been
told coating your face with lemon juice
makes you invisible to cameras, perhaps
similar to using lemon juice for
invisible ink. Wheeler had even gone as
far as to test the theory by taking a
Polaroid picture of himself after
coating his face with the lemon juice,
and sure enough, his face didn’t appear
in the print. The police never were able
to explain this, but likely Wheeler was
as incompetent at photography as he was
at burglary. Clearly, Wheeler was too
incompetent at burglary to know he was
incompetent.
So, does Dunning-Kruger exist in the
business world? Absolutely…
Just as a typical driver believes their
driving skills are KCB Safari Rally
worthy, until they’re on a track getting
blown past by an inferior car driven by
someone who has far better braking and
cornering skills, we all tend to
underestimate what is possible. We live
in our own bubbles and are comparing our
abilities only against those who also
reside in our bubbles. Therefore, we
don’t know what we don’t know – we
don’t know there are far better drivers
outside our bubbles.
You may think your organization is at the
peak of efficiency, until you bring
someone in from Google, Facebook,
Amazon, Safaricom, etc. who reveals what
the true peak really can be – what
fully Agile processes and cultures can
do to reduce time to market, how
effective SREs and DevOps can be, how to
remain innovative, what continuous
delivery can do to, etc.
In short, Dunning-Kruger is as rampant
within the business sector as it is
anywhere else, if not even more so.
Expect it to be present in your
organization, and guard against it. Look
at it within yourself as well. Who
amongst us hasn’t experienced the shock
of discovering we’ve failed a test that
we actually thought we’d aced? We all
have suffered at one time or another
from the Dunning-Kruger effect.