Oscar
Wilde, as famous for his witty quips as for his plays and novels, once
said, “The only thing to do with good advice is to pass it on. It’s
never of any use to oneself.” Although we can take Wilde’s maxim with a
grain of salt, he makes a good point in his usual ironic way. Listening
to advice is difficult because, simply put, it’s very often wrong. On
the other hand, you could be given good advice that holds generally, but
it’s not applicable to your specific situation. Or, what’s worse,
you’ve been given some good advice, but it’s not what you want to hear. You don’t listen, and then you make the very mistake you could have avoided by listening to the advice you asked for in the first place.
While
there are no definite rules for listening to advice, here are some
basic tips for knowing when to heed suggestions and when, as Wilde said,
“to pass it on.”
1. Who’s your source?
If you want to know whether you should listen to someone’s advice, the
first thing you should do is impartially evaluate the person advising
you. It’s easy to think that since X is your BFF, she’ll know exactly
what to do in any given situation. Analyze exactly what your dilemma is,
then ask for advice from those who have been in similar situations
before.
But,
be forewarned that just because someone has been in your shoes before
doesn’t mean that your problem will be solved with their same course of
action. Cognitive psychologist Daniel Kahneman researched cognitive biases in his paper about focusing illusions
. “When people consider the impact of any single factor on their
well-being,” writes Kahneman, “they tend to exaggerate its importance;
we refer to this tendency as a focusing illusion.” Kahneman suggests
that focusing illusions can very often be the main source of error in
decision-making. So, it’s very possible that when you take a friend’s
advice based on her being in a similar situation before, you may be
focusing on only one aspect of your shared experience, to the irrational
exclusion of other factors.
Another
big mistake that many people make when asking for advice is selecting
the most confident–not the most qualified–person to help them out. A recent NewScientist article
describes an advice-taking study conducted by Carnegie Mellon
researcher Don Moore. In the study, Moore gave cash to a group of
participants whose task was to correctly guess the weight of several
different people based only on photographs. However, the participants
were not allowed to guess themselves; rather, they had to buy advice
from a group of four volunteer advisors. The participants were not
allowed to see the advisors’ weight guesses; they were only allowed to
see each advisor’s confidence level. And, just as Moore hypothesized,
the advisor who was most confident about his guesses sold the most
advice, regardless of his accuracy.
2. Did you pay for the advice? So what?
In another advice-taking study,
Harvard Business School researcher Francesca Gina determined that
people will give more value to advice when they pay for it, regardless
of quality. Gina suggests that people tend to overvalue advice for
either two reasons. For one, they buy into the “sunk-cost fallacy,”
meaning that, in trying to get their money’s worth, people will take
advice simply because they don‘t want to waste funds. Another reason for
Gina’s findings may be related to cognitive dissonance, which is a
phenomenon that occurs when a person experiences an inconsistency
between information one receives and ideas a person believes are true or
important about themselves. In Gina’s study, cognitive dissonance
occurs when people spend money on advice. Even though the quality of the
advice may be poor, they must listen in order to resolve the
inconsistency that arises because they feel strongly that they are not
the type of person who would spend money unnecessarily.
3. Do you even need advice?
American
author Erica Jong once said, “Advice is what we ask for when we already
know the answer but wish we didn’t.” Jong’s quote speaks to a fairly
common phenomenon in which advice-seekers need only positive affirmation
about a particular decision in order to proceed. Ali Hale’s recent SKA Ocean Blogging blog post, How to Stop Waiting for Permission
discusses the counterintuitive notion that you must wait for the
go-ahead before you try something you’ve already decided you want to do.
Foregoing advice may be a good idea when we think of the value inherent in learning from mistakes. Tevjan Pettinger, in his SKA Ocean Blogging article, “How to Learn from Mistakes”, explains how mistakes are a necessary part of self-improvement. Taking advice to heart too often can lead
to a situation in which you are avoiding risk at the cost of potential
success. As Theodore Roosevelt once so aptly put it, “Far better it is
to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered
by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor
suffer much because they live in a gray twilight that knows neither
victory nor defeat.”
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