Most of us love to brainstorm with colleagues. But so often, our idea-generating sessions don’t lead to anything tangible. Teams fill up walls with sticky notes about creative possibilities and suggestions for improvement, but nothing actually gets implemented. Some researchers even have a name for it: “innovation theater.” This week, we explore the science of execution. Psychologist Bob Sutton tells us how to move from innovation theater . . . to actual innovation.
For more of our Innovation 2.0 series, listen to our episode on how big ideas are born and our episode on creating environments that foster growth.
Additional Resources
Books:
The Friction Project: How Smart Leaders Make the Right Things Easier and the Wrong Things Harder, by Robert I. Sutton and Hayagreeva Rao, 2024.
The Asshole Survival Guide: How to Deal with People Who Treat You Like Dirt, by Robert I. Sutton, 2017.
Research:
Who Pays the Cancer Tax? Patients’ Narratives in a Movement to Reduceh Their Invisible Work, by Melissa A. Valentine, Steven M. Asch, and Esther Ahn, Organization Science, 2022.
Team Talk: Learning, Jargon, and Structure Versus the Pulse of the Network, by Ronald S. Burt and Ray E. Reagans, Social Networks, 2022.
People Systematically Overlook Subtractive Changes, by Gabrielle S. Adams et al., Nature, 2021.
On Racial Diversity and Group Decision Making: Identifying Multiple Effects of Racial Composition on Jury Deliberations, by Samuel R. Summers, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2006.
Grab Bag:
Rid Your Organization of Obstacles That Infuriate Everyone, by Robert I. Sutton and Huggy Rao, Harvard Business Review, 2024.
Transcript
The transcript below may be for an earlier version of this episode. Our transcripts are provided by various partners and may contain errors or deviate slightly from the audio.
Shankar Vedantam:This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. When you're trying to invent a new product, orwrite a screenplay, or come up with a new way to do something at work, it's fun to focus on thepossibilities. It's enjoyable to have brainstorming sessions, throw ideas up on a whiteboard,daydream. Very often, however, these brainstorming sessions don't lead to anything tangible.Teams fill up walls with sticky notes about creative possibilities and suggestions forimprovement, but none of them are actually implemented. If you've been part of an organizationthat does this, you might get the sneaking suspicion that you are not engaged in innovation, butin what some researchers call innovation theater. This is not to say that ideas are unimportant,but it is to underscore that when it comes to building something new, what really matters isexecution. For the last few weeks, we've been exploring the science of innovation. We'veexamined how successful entrepreneurs are great at something called effectuation. We'velooked at our attitudes about the role of genius in success, and how cultures of genius canundermine our growth. If you missed those episodes, I strongly recommend you listen to them inthis podcast feed. Today, in the latest installment of our Innovation 2.0 series, we explore thescience of execution. How to move from innovation theater to actual innovation, this week onHidden Brain. We all have them. Small frustrations that make our lives just a little bit moredifficult. Like standing in a long line at the grocery store, or getting too many emails. Not beingable to reach a customer service rep when you have a problem. At Stanford University,psychologist Bob Sutton studies these frustrations. The annoying bureaucracies we encounterwhen dealing with companies, institutions and organizations. Bob Sutton, welcome to HiddenBrain.Bob Sutton:Oh, Shankar, it's great to be here. I'm happy to talk to you.Shankar Vedantam:I want to start with a personal story that I think many of our listeners can relate to, Bob. Itinvolves a conflict that you had with your cable provider. Tell me the story of what happened.Bob Sutton:Well, I mean, there's a sad part. So my mother passed away, but then her partner was still livingin the house, and there was all these problems that we could not have cable TV for him. And Ikept calling them. They claimed they'd fix it. I would go through these phone trees over and overand over again. It was just driving me absolutely, and all the stress and grief of my mother'sdeath that I was dealing with. This was a part of it. And after probably 10 different phone callsand phone trees and people making mistakes, I went and I complained, and I did it on Twitter,now X. And this person who is a board member found out about it, and he said, I will help you.And then magically, I got the VIP privilege line, one phone call, fixed immediately, all feeswaived. And in fact, later on, about three weeks later, my son just wanted an upgrade up in SanFrancisco, and I called them. They came to his apartment for no charge. They didn't chargethem for the new equipment. It was like we were moved from the regular person's experience tothe VIP lounge, and we had the privilege to be protected from the inconveniences that the littlepeople suffered from.Shankar Vedantam:Bob had always been interested in how organizations run. So instead of simply reveling in hisnewfound VIP status, he looked into why the cable company was giving some customers theVIP treatment. He discovered that the goal of this ultra-secret club was not about pleasingcustomers. It was meant to serve the boss class. When well-connected people called in favorsor irate customers created trouble, having a VIP lounge to send them to bought executivespeace and quiet.Bob Sutton:And I sort of compare that to, well, he's one of, this guy named Carl Liebert, he's been head ofmany companies. At one point, he was head of supply chain of Home Depot, and there were allthese problems at Home Depot. And he not only would go shopping anonymously, he wouldactually work the midnight shift with the workers loading and loading boxes to try to figure outwhere the supply chain problems actually happened. And to me, there's a big differencebetween being in the VIP lounge and sort of being protected from the inconveniences, if youwill.Shankar Vedantam:Bob argues that one reason companies and organizations drop the ball when it comes toexecution is that the leaders of companies are too far removed from the experiences ofcustomers. Well, that is far from the only reason. Some organizations are so complex thatgetting different silos to talk to one another is next to impossible. He cites the work of Stanfordresearcher, Melissa Valentine, who studied a cancer center.Bob Sutton:And what her research found was that patients suffered from what she called the cancer tax,which means that when you have a relative who gets cancer, it's so hard to glue together all thedifferent parts of the treatment that it falls to the patient. And so the cancer center she studiedhad excellent doctors, individual departments, but you need all these different services. Whenyou have somebody who has cancer, and one of my neighbors, her brother is a doctor, andtheir mother got cancer, and the doctor said, the fact that I'm a physician actually didn't help methat much navigating through the system because there's so much fragmentation and lack ofcommunication between silos and occupations and so forth. So sometimes it's structural too,and it's very difficult to overcome for anyone.Shankar Vedantam:One organization Bob studied revealed a problem that he calls executive magnification.Bob Sutton:A lot of times senior executives complain there's resistance to change. When I come up with anidea, people push back against it. But all of us who are in hierarchies, whether we're baboons orhumans, we tend to focus very heavily on the moves and actions and preferences of those inpower. And it's just adaptive because those in power, they can give us rewards andpunishments of all kinds. And this was a new CEO. And one of the first meetings he went to,and this is CEO of a Fortune 10 company, a very large company, and he gets to an early meeting and he just comments, where's the blueberry muffins? And it was just an off-handcomment. And then somebody put in his notes, you know, prefers blueberry muffins, and hecouldn't figure out for years why every meeting he went to, there were huge piles of blueberrymuffins. And imagine all these poor underlings just being really nervous because otherwisethey'd have an unhappy CEO.Shankar Vedantam:Thank you for watching. Now, did the CEO actually want blueberry muffins at all thesemeetings?Bob Sutton:No, maybe at that moment, but that wasn't particularly important to him. But it's a reminder forpeople who are in power that there's all sorts of psychological research about attention turns upthe hierarchy, and so you've got to be careful. And even when you're sort of thinking out loud tosay, I'm thinking out loud, I'm not asking you to do anything. And in a more sort of seriousexample, some 30 years ago, I did research with the 7-Eleven company. So the then CEO, hewalks into a 7-Eleven store, and a clerk is rude to him. He comes back to the office, and he kindof has a temper tantrum about how unacceptable it is. And some of his underlings say, oh mygoodness, we've got to do something about the courtesy in 7-Eleven stores. And they started allof these different contests, some of which I was involved in evaluating. And the idea was toprovide incentives for every clerk in every 7-Eleven store to smile, establish eye contact, and tosay thank you to every customer. And they did all this analysis. And in the end, and this isincluded in some of the research I was involved in, we were able to show there was virtually norelationship between the courtesy in a 7-Eleven store and their sales. People want to get in andout quickly, and they don't want a rude clerk. That's all they want. And after spending millions ofdollars, including they had a thanks a million contest, that the owner of one 7-Eleven store ormanager, if they had perfect courtesy, they entered a drawing, and somebody won a milliondollars for the courtesy in their store. And this was just largely the effect of executivemagnification. The CEO hadn't realized that this sort of crazy thing happened.Shankar Vedantam:As you can see, what customers and clients perceive as a badly run organization can be theresult of many different internal forces. Sometimes, managers want to ignore unpleasantfeedback. At other times, companies become hyper-focused on one issue, like smiling atcustomers, or making blueberry muffins available at every meeting when those things don'treally matter. A few years ago, Bob wrote an entire book about another reason groups fail toexecute on good ideas. The book's title has, shall we say, salty language.Bob Sutton:For better or worse, in 2007, I published a book called The No A**hole Rule, which I thoughtwas going to be my worst-selling book, and it's turned out to be my best-selling book. And theargument that that book makes, that when people leave others feeling demeaned, deenergized, disrespected, that it's actually bad for business. When people feel that way, theyperform less well. Their health is negatively affected. One of the key things is that they're notwilling to go the extra mile. And there's large-scale studies, for example, in fast food chains, that when you've got a nasty manager of a fast food chain, that people are more likely to steal, morelikely to quit. So if you have leaders throughout an organization who treat people withdisrespect, that that ends up being a problem. We can talk about whether people who are jerksget ahead in some systems, that actually might be possible in some systems. But when youwork for somebody who leaves you feeling that way, I think that the evidence is quite clear thatit undermines the performance of the organization or team.Shankar Vedantam:And there's also been evidence that suggests that even when you have one person on a team,even if the team is quite large, but you have one person on the team who really is a negativepersonality or a difficult person to work with or just an unpleasant person, that can damage therelationships and the camaraderie of the whole team.Bob Sutton:Yeah, so the evidence, and there's two reasons, at least one is, there's a lot of evidence thatnegative emotions are more contagious than positive emotions in general. And then the otherthing, which some studies show, and I think if you look at more anecdotal evidence, you'll see, ifyou talk to a boss and say, who do you spend most of your time with? Very often they'll say, Ispend 90% of my time dealing with the 10% who are most difficult. And so that's the sort ofuniform sort of issue that happens throughout organizations. So yeah, and it's funny because atone point, I thought maybe it might be good to have maybe one low status jerk in a team ororganization to show how not to behave, but I've since come to the belief that they're so difficultthat it's better to get rid of them, although it's pretty difficult, as I bet all your listeners can tellyou.Shankar Vedantam:Yeah, I've been on many search committees for many positions, and I think increasingly manypeople say, even when you have someone who's incredibly talented and smart, if this person isa truly unpleasant person, it's probably not worth it to bring them on the team.Bob Sutton:Yeah, so one of the tests that I like to use, and if you look at a place like Microsoft, I believethey've had a transformation around this, is I ask them, if you are a superstar and a jerk, do youget ahead? And there are some organizations, if you are a superstar and a jerk, under the oldMicrosoft, it was actually rewarded to try to push down fellow coworkers, and now the kind ofpeople who get ahead at Microsoft, and they're quite explicit like this, are the people who dogood work and who help others along rather than stomp on them on the way to the top. And alittle bit of competition, even a lot of competition in the culture can be very useful, but thequestion is how you treat your coworkers can have a big effect.Shankar Vedantam:As Bob looked at these many disparate examples, he started to see that there was onecommon theme that connected all of them. It was the idea of friction. It might be helpful toexplain this with an analogy. Let's say you're an engineer designing a car. You want it to run assmoothly as possible. But this doesn't mean that you want to reduce friction in everything the car does. When a driver hits the brakes, friction is what makes the car stop. If a motorist yanksat the steering wheel and it spins around without any resistance, the car could twist out ofcontrol. At the same time, if there's too much friction in the wheels, the car won't move. As anengineer, in other words, friction is essential to everything you design. But there are times youwant to increase friction, and times you need to decrease friction. The more Bob thought aboutit, the more he realized that friction works the same way in organizations. The reason manypeople and companies fall down when it comes to executing on their dreams is that they havetoo much friction in places that need to run smoothly and too little friction in places that need tomove slowly. When we come back, the science of friction and how you can use it to design yourown life. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. This is Hidden Brain, I'mShankar Vedantam. All of us encounter inconveniences as we deal with cable companies,schools, and governments. At Stanford University, psychologist Bob Sutton studies theorganizational origins of these frustrations. Along with Huggy Rao, Bob is co-author of TheFriction Project, how smart leaders make the right things easier and the wrong things harder.Bob and Huggy argue that every organization, from corner convenience stores to internationalaid agencies, can be plagued by destructive friction. Bob, I want to talk about a source of frictionthat we see in public policy all the time. You talk about a system in Michigan where residentswere applying for government assistance, but found it very difficult to do so. Tell me what washappening, Bob.Bob Sutton:So there's a class that I've been teaching for years with some colleagues that's called DesignLeadership, and what we do is we take a pair of students and we link them to a company or anonprofit and help them solve a little problem. So usually these are young students, but everynow and then we get somebody visit Stanford. So this guy, his name's Michael Brennan. Hewas on leave from being the CEO of the United Way of Southeastern Michigan. Firstconversation I have, he pulls out this really long form and lays it out on the floor. It's 42 pageslong. It has a thousand questions.Shankar Vedantam:Wow.Bob Sutton:And he says this form is a form that is completed by more than 2 million Michigan residents ayear, people who need help with food, with medical care, with financial assistance. And it's aterrible form. And just to give you an example of how silly the form was, my favorite or leastfavorite question was, when was your child conceived?Shankar Vedantam:Conceived, not born.Bob Sutton:Conceived, not born, conceived, not born. And he starts a non-profit called Sevilla insoutheastern Michigan. And one of their first projects was to work on trying to fix this form. And they actually made a huge amount of change in this. And it's much easier for Michigan residentsnow to complete that form.Shankar Vedantam:I mean, I have to confess that every year when tax day rolls around, I feel exactly the samething about the tax code, which is that I think of myself as a reasonably smart person, but I findit genuinely incomprehensible, and almost deliberately so.Bob Sutton:Oh, yes. Well, and very often, I think that happens that no individual who assembles thoseforms wants to do it to us, but every person wants to add their sort of little thing that makes themhappy. So that's one of the problems there.Shankar Vedantam:So I'm imagining when it comes to something like the tax code, over time, someone somewherehas found that there's someone who cheats some aspect of the tax code. And so you say, let'sadd this other little wrinkle over here that prevents people from doing this. And if you do thissufficiently often over a hundred years, you're going to end up with something incrediblycomplex and difficult to understand.Bob Sutton:Yes. And one of the other problems is that in most systems, the people who want to take thingsaway, there tends to be sort of one advocate for it. And one of the things that we focus on inorganizational life is that people who lead more large and complex systems and make lifedifficult for all of us, those are the people who tend to get rewarded, not the people who takethings away. Just as an example, in my own university, and I suspect many other organizationsin the world, a good way, if you're a manager, to get a raise is to build a larger and largerorganization, because the more people report to you, the more you deserve to get paid, at leastaccording to human resources. And if your team gets cut in half, sometimes you get a pay cuttoo. So a lot of times, there's just incentives to add complexity too.Shankar Vedantam:You cite the example of someone who uses a wonderful phrase that I had never heard before,jargon monoxide. Tell me about that, Bob.Bob Sutton:Well, so I first heard this. There's a woman named Polly LeBeur, who been around, she was amanagement writer for years, and she visited my classes maybe 20 years ago, and she usedthe term jargon monoxide, and I've been sort of enamored with it ever since. And to us, it'shollow and confusing language, and we dissect three or four different kinds of jargon monoxide.We talk about just bulls**t, just this language that means absolutely nothing. The other two kindsto me are more interesting. A second kind is which we call convoluted crap. This is stuff thatcould be simple, but it's so complicated it's impossible to understand it. And then perhaps myfavorite one is jargon mishmash syndrome. So this is where you have so many different sort oflanguages and terms that people can't understand what is going on. And there's some situations where a word or a term means so many things to so many different people, they don't knowwhat it is. That's Denny Kahneman's definition of noise, is it's a random scatter of ideas.Shankar Vedantam:It's not always too much friction that's the problem within organizations. Sometimes the cause ofour frustrations is actually a lack of friction within organizations. One example that Bob cites isthe creation of Google's smart glasses technology, known as Google Glass.Bob Sutton:Well, so Google Glass, this is one of the famous stories in Google's history. It also might beGod's way of telling you you have too much money when you do stuff like this, by the way. So,what happened was, so there was a team that developed essentially a set of eyeglasses thathad a camera and a computer involved in it. And it was a really cool sort of prototype. AndSergey Brin, co-founder of Google, he saw the technology, and he got so excited that he sort ofripped it out of the developer's hands and gave the technology to some of the most famouspeople in the world. And then very quickly, all the technology reviews and all the people tried touse it. It had battery life problems. It actually had a whole bunch of reliability problems. Oh, ithad privacy problems. That was another issue. And so they ended up sort of pulling it from themarket. And the technology reviews, one in particular, was this is one of the worst technologyproducts ever made. And to us, the reason that's a lesson, and especially this idea of peoplewho are in power sometimes don't face enough friction. His team did try to tell him that theydidn't think it was a very good idea, but they kind of couldn't stop him because he had the powerto rip it out of their hands and to put it into the marketplace. And there's also a sort of apostscript to that that many of the people were involved in that project were very skilledtechnologists just sort of quit in frustration. That is sort of a classic story of something that wasdone a little bit too quickly.Shankar Vedantam:We've talked a little bit about the challenge of silos. You gave me the example of the hospitalwhere you build a wonderful oncology department, but the oncology department doesn't talk tothe hematology department, which doesn't talk to the internal medicine department. And ifyou're a patient, you in fact might have to interact with more than one department at thehospital, and it creates this very difficult navigational problem for patients. But you also makethe very interesting point that sometimes organizations also need to have teams function a littleindependently, because if you don't, if you bring everyone together too soon, you can end upwith an echo chamber.Bob Sutton:When people communicate and reach consensus too early and too often, you end up where,what is it? Everybody thinks the same, so nobody thinks very much. And when you haveindependent, even competing units coming up with a solution to the problem, sometimes youcome up with better solutions. And in the early days, at Hewlett Packard, this is in the late 70s,early 80s, when they were in the printer business, one reason they dominated so well in theprinter business is they had such decentralized businesses that there were actually three or fourdifferent Hewlett Packard divisions that had their own printer in the marketplace. And although you can say, well, this was a very expensive market test, it was really dumb. But on the otherhand, you did not have the problem of people having to have consensus. You had a real testand the best product sort of won in the marketplace. So to me, that is an example. Yes, therecan be some inefficiency in this case, but you certainly don't have the group thing problem.Shankar Vedantam:I was thinking about a study that I remember reading many years ago. I think this might havebeen Sam Summers at Tufts University, and he was interested in the criminal justice system.And he was looking at juries that had diverse pools of jurors versus juries that did not havediverse pools of jurors. And what he found very interestingly was that the more diverse the jurypool was, the more it prompted multiple people on the jury to challenge one another and todisagree with one another. And that disagreement obviously produced friction. It wasuncomfortable. It would have been easier if everyone agreed on everything from the firstmoment. But of course, as you can imagine, the decisions were actually much better as a resultof that friction. Another example of where friction could come in useful.Bob Sutton:I agree with that in having studied various elements of creativity for years. If you look at teamsthat are the most creative teams, they're teams that fight in an atmosphere of mutual respect.They know when to start fighting and they know when to stop fighting. A good example of this isEd Catmull, who was president of Pixar. He would set up something that was called the BrainTrust, where all of the different people who made movies would review the dailies or the ideasfor each other's films. And they'd engage in an argument in an atmosphere of mutual respectand was understood that it was your job to be critical, but not to be cruel. So yes, to me, that'sthe hallmark of Creative Teams.Shankar Vedantam:You also talk about how sometimes the longer we go through an experience, the moremeaningful the experience becomes to us, which is a very interesting psychological idea wherethe more friction we have, the more engaged we might feel. So talk about that idea, Bob.Bob Sutton:Well, this is, you know so much about psychology, it's ridiculous.Bob Sutton:This is a very old finding, this goes back to the 50s, the notion that labor leads to love. It's justthat idea that when you put more of your heart and soul into something, it becomes morevaluable to you independently of its actual value.Shankar Vedantam:You give a couple of examples in the book of people and organizations that slow down and itreally benefited them. One of the examples you talk about is the company Waze, which actuallygot a whole bunch of funding and could have grown very quickly. But tell me what washappening with Waze at the time for those of our listeners who are unfamiliar with it. First, tell uswhat Waze is.Bob Sutton:So Waze is a navigation software that it's more social than other navigation software. Andessentially you put in the address that you want to go to and it tells you where you're going togo. So what happened in the early days of Waze, this is about 2012 or so, Noam Bardin, who isthe CEO, was actually an Israeli based company, but their primary market was in the UnitedStates. And so they got about $30 million in Series B financing. And the venture capitalists whogave them the money wanted them to do two things, which are about going fast. One was tohire people, and the other thing was to do more product development. But the thing that Noamand his team figured out was that when people downloaded the software, a month later, none ofthem were using it. So there was a problem. So what he did was he stopped the wholecompany, use sort of an automotive analogy, hit the brakes, and did both quantitative andqualitative analysis about why people aren't keeping our software, and did no hiring and noproduct development. And he made a list. He called it the MIT list, the most important thing list.And once they had that list, if you will, they hit the gas. They started hiring people and doingproduct development. Once they figured out what needed to be done, and this is very much outof Kahneman, Daniel Kahneman stuff on fast and slow, that when you're in a cognitive mindfield, you don't rush ahead. Sometimes it's better just to stand there and figure out what's goingon instead of rushing ahead.Shankar Vedantam:In public policy, Bob, it feels like there are often times when you want to do something as aleader. If you're a president or you're a member of Congress or a senator, you want to jumpahead and you want to pass laws, implement policies. But sometimes, if you try and do that tooquickly, you can find things backfiring on you, because in fact, people are not ready for the newlaw, they haven't been prepared for it, you haven't laid the groundwork for it. Can you talk a littlebit about this, that in some ways, you might actually want to introduce friction as you're trying tosolve important problems of public policy, so that you can bring people along with you and notjust impose ideas top-down?Bob Sutton:Yeah, so I love that example. I think the example that for me resonates best there is the effortthat was made by the state of Michigan to reduce a benefit form that was completed by 2.5million people a year, and they cut it by 80% and made it much simpler. But what they did in theprocess was they didn't just sort of rush in and say, the current benefits form, which is 1,000questions long and 42 pages long and has all these silly questions, it's just dumb and we'regonna fix it. First, what they did was they got the civil servants on board, the head of theagency. They brought them into a room and had them fill out the 42-page form. He got to pageeight and couldn't go any further. This is a form required of millions of Michiganders. And thenthe other thing they did, which I thought was very important, was that they did develop aprototype, but then they spent about six months working with civil servants and lawyers, andthey went through 1,700 pages of rules and regulations to come up with a form that was 80%shorter, but still complied with the rules. And now people are filling it out much faster. There'sfewer mistakes. There's fewer visits to the office because people are confused. But to yourpoint, there was the moments when they had to slow down and bring aboard the civil servants and government leaders, and they had to slow down to make sure that their new, simple, lowfriction form fit the actual rules and regulations, because otherwise they get mired in litigation, ofcourse.Shankar Vedantam:Can you talk a moment about the idea of friction when it comes to bringing about change, bothwithin organizations as well as within societies? When you think about many social movementsthat have brought about successful change, many of them have done so by actually introducingfriction into the system. So if you think about the civil rights movement, for example, you mighthave marches and protests that basically make it hard for organizations or societies to functionsmoothly. And in some ways, introducing friction, throwing sand into the gears, is designed tosay there's something wrong with the way the gears are turning. Let's slow down and figure outwhat needs to be fixed.Bob Sutton:Well, I mean, that's interesting. I'm not a social movement theorist, but my co-author Huggy Rauis. And he would argue that a lot of times when there's change in an organization or whenthere's change in a society, although this often can have negative side effects, that's sort offorcing people to slow down and to think and to make things more difficult for them enablesthem to actually think. And a little bit of inconvenience for people, a little bit of struggle,sometimes forces them to be more mindful about the challenges that they face and are imposedon others.Shankar Vedantam:Thank you As we've seen, friction can hurt and friction can help. As with all aspects of humanbehavior, the correct question to ask is not whether friction is a good thing or a bad thing, but toask when friction is good and how much is useful. That's when we come back. You're listeningto Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. BobSutton is an organizational psychologist at Stanford University. He studies friction, theresistance that we encounter in our daily lives, and the organizational hoops we must jumpthrough when we pay a utility bill or get a driver's license. Friction is the inbox full of emails wecomb through every morning, and the meetings on our calendar that go nowhere, or being puton endless hold as we try to reach someone in customer service. When his mother passedaway some years ago, Bob found himself mired in friction. Besides dealing with his grief, hediscovered he had to deal with bureaucracy. For example, he needed to update her carregistration. So one morning, he headed to the Department of Motor Vehicles. Knowing that theDMV had a reputation as a bureaucratic hellhole, he dreaded the visit.Bob Sutton:I got there at 7.30 in the morning without an appointment, and I had blocked off the entire day.And I was maybe 50th in line. A fellow walks up and down the line, asks each one of us whywe're there. There were some people who didn't need to be there. For example, one fellow wasthere for a passport. They don't provide passports, so he said he should leave. He gave usforms, and then he sent me to the window where I was supposed to go, so he was doing triage,and I was out of there by 8.15, and I was completely confused about how quickly and easily it happened. And he was somebody, we'd call him somebody who was a trustee of others' time, afriction fixer, who I initially thought he just took it upon himself to do it. So we have since foundout that there is a large-scale effort to improve both the speed and emotional experience ofgoing through the DMV.Shankar Vedantam:You used a very interesting word a second ago, and the word was triage, because of course,when this person came out 15 minutes before the doors opened, and basically said, let me sendpeople to different places. This person actually is waiting for a passport, that's not the right, youcan't get it at the DMV, this person needs to go counter number six, this person needs to fill outa form. There's just a whole bunch of information and time that this person ended up saving bystepping out for 15 minutes, because of course, the person knows everything that you can getat the DMV, the one person that knows everything. Can you talk about this idea? It's such aprofound idea, because I think many organizations don't have a person like that. When you goto a hospital, there's often no one actually playing triage that basically says, here's how younavigate our organization, because that's what this person was doing.Bob Sutton:That's exactly what that person was doing. And that's one of our solutions. We talk about howfriction fixers, yes, in an ideal world, they'll fix things on the team or the organization, but one ofthe hallmarks of people who are great at understanding what is available and what aren't,they're sort of tour guides through the system. And we talk in the book about grease people andgunk people, and I'll name a name, in my department, Management, Science and Engineering,there's a woman named Lori Cottle, who's our head of student services. She's been therealmost as long as I have, maybe she's been there only 27 years. And Lori sees it as her job tomake every student's journey throughout Stanford as easy and satisfying as possible. And she'lltell you who to talk to, who not to talk to. She'll tell you which rules are completely inflexible andwhich ones you can get around and how to get around them. And to me, somebody like her isan absolutely beautiful part of a system. And maybe she's changed a few rules, but mostly sheknows how the system works, and she sees it as her job to help you have the best journey youcan through the system as a Stanford student. She advises undergraduates, masters and PhDstudents in our department, and they all have a different set of rules, and she all helps them getthrough a fairly complicated system as easily as possible.Shankar Vedantam:And this must be true not just at universities, but at organizations across the board. Asorganizations get bigger, they get more complex. There are more ways in which things fittogether or don't fit together. There are organizational and institutional histories that peoplemight not know if they're encountering the organization for the first time. Having someone playthis role, and you use the word tour guide, I might use the word translator, because I think that'sthe other role that this person is playing, to say, here's how this section of the organization talksto this other section of the organization. So invaluable.Bob Sutton:Yes, and to me, very often people like that, and I think of organizations with silos andoccupations, very often they're people who are generalists in a sea of specialists, that theyknow enough about how each part works to sort of glue the system together and to serve astour guides for all of us.Shankar Vedantam:You talk about a very interesting idea called the rule of halves. What is the rule of halves, Bob?Bob Sutton:So the rule of halves, this is an idea that actually Lydie Klotz, he and I came up with the notionthat as sort of a thought experiment, if you went through the number of meetings you have, thelength of the emails, the number of emails you sent, what would happen if you cut it by 50%?And then the example we use in the book, it comes to us from a guy named Rob Cross. He wasworking with an executive, a guy named Scott, who had about 5,000 employees reporting tohim. And he also had 16 direct reports. And he also had this philosophy that he should beinvolved in all decisions. And one of the things that Rob Cross did with him as sort of aconsulting job is he said, we're gonna cut everything by 50%. The number of direct reports youhave, the number of emails you send, the number of meetings you go to. And it turned out thatthis guy saved his job and saved his marriage, as Rob tells it, because he actually did apply therule of halves. So we're not saying to all of your listeners, you should cut everything by 50%, butit's a good sort of thought experiment to start with. And it was kind of fun, because Lydie Klotzand I, I don't know if it's his idea or my idea, but we give each other credit.Shankar Vedantam:But in some ways, I think what you're saying is that if an organization has a set of policies orrules, and you cut the policies in half, or cut the rules in half, it doesn't mean that that has to beyour final answer. You might still decide you actually need to add back many rules that you'vecut, but just the thought experiment, the effect of basically saying, let me cut it in half and seewhat actually is essential, jolts our minds, I think, into awareness of how complex our systemshave become.Bob Sutton:Yeah, yes. Another also related example, which we talk about in the book, and was based on alittle piece that I wrote with Rebecca Hines, who was, Rebecca Hines is a wonderful person.She was involved as our research assistant from the very beginning as an undergraduate, andnow she runs something called the Asana Work Innovation Lab. She's actually hiring professorsinstead of working for them. And so we did this little piece on, we call it a team reset, and it waswith 60 Asana employees. And what she did with 30 of those 60s is that she had them removeall standing meetings from their calendars for 48 hours. And then after evaluating, if you will, theamount of effort and the value of each one, add them back in. That to me, that's a completecleanse and that's this idea of once you take something away, it forces you to think aboutwhether you actually want to put it back in. So, and by the way, that team reset experiencesaved the average employee about four hours a week.Shankar Vedantam: You tell a remarkable story about Winston Churchill during the very difficult days of World WarII, focused not on the Nazi war machine, but on bureaucrats in Britain. Tell me that story, Bob.Bob Sutton:This is August 1940. The Blitzkrieg started a month later, and what he did is he sent out a 234word memo called the Brevity Memo, and he said, please stop writing such long convoluteddetailed memos. It's slowing down the whole system. He said it much more elegantly than that.And then he also added this notion that the length and number of memos that are written by anambassador is not an indication of the quality of your work. And by the way, and this isconsistent with our notion that friction fixing is sort of like mowing the lawn. There is no one anddone. When he came back, because those of us who know the history, he was prime ministerduring World War II, but then he got voted out, and then he came back some years later. Whenhe came back in the 50s, he wrote more brevity memos and said it was even worse than before.So it is one of those things that you've got to have the discipline to keep fighting over and overagain. There's no one and done with this sort of stuff.Shankar Vedantam:Because of course, things will keep growing back because of the addition sickness that we allsuffer from.Bob Sutton:Yes, yes, we are just humans.Shankar Vedantam:A crucial lesson that runs through many of these ideas is the lesson of empathy. Organizations,companies and governments often run poorly because the people making the decisions aredivorced from the experience of the people who work in the organization and the people whoneed the services of the organization. One of Bob's superheroes when it comes to fixingproblems with friction is an executive at General Motors named Mary Barra.Bob Sutton:Every person I've ever worked with just loves her. And the number of different jobs she's had atGeneral Motors are amazing. She ran a large plant. She was head of manufacturing. She washead of supply chain. She was head of HR before they brought her in. So rather than beingsomebody who just is sort of focused on one element of running this large complexorganization, she understands how it runs. And then the other thing she does, since weinterviewed a number of people who worked with her, is she's the classic person who makesvery strong decisions, but she always waits to hear everybody's opinion, and then she says,we're gonna do this. And I think that's a hallmark of a good leader who glues together differentelements of an organization. They hear all the opinions, but then they also make a cleardecision about what should and shouldn't be done. Because leaders who have unclearmessages talk about creating friction, you're gonna spend all sorts of time discerning what theboss actually means.Shankar Vedantam: I think partly what we're saying here is over and over, you need people who understand howdifferent parts of an organization fit together. And especially as organizations get big andcomplex, someone who's worked in HR and has worked in supply chain and has worked infinance and has worked in this, that and the other, knows how these things actually interact witheach other and has seen how the problem looks from different points of view.Bob Sutton:Yes, I think that's absolutely true. And to me, that's sort of the hallmark of somebody who's agood friction fixer because they're always learning more about how different pieces of thesystem fit together.Shankar Vedantam:So Bob, you've been married for nearly 40 years as we're having this conversation. Your 40thwedding anniversary is coming up next year. Talk about the idea of friction in relationships andwhen they're useful, when they're not, how they've played a role in your life.Bob Sutton:Well, yeah, well, you know, I guess the opening line, what's the supreme song? You can't hurrylove. So my wife Marina, who is, she's a lawyer, she's a rational person. We do not makedecisions quickly in our family if they're important. And so we started living together, well, when Iwas 21 and she was 19, and we lived together seven years before we got married. And thestory is that, so I'm an academic, and at this point, I was a brand new academic at Stanford. Iwas just starting to be considered for the tenure process. And my late father-in-law's name wasRod Park. He stood up and gave us a toast. He was, at that time, he was provost at UCBerkeley. He understood academics. And he said, so Bob is used to a seven-year tenure clock,and at seven years, they make a decision up or out. And he said, Marina has made the samedecision. She's given him the seven-year test, and it's up. So that was sort of the beginning ofthat, and you can't hurry love. It takes a long time. And some people do get married after theirfirst dates, but I'm not sure that's a good idea.Shankar Vedantam:But can you talk about the idea that in some ways, relationships themselves are, they're not likeproducts. They're not things that you can rush to market. They're things that in fact take time,and they grow, and they ripen, and they ripen at their own speed. And sometimes hurrying themalong, or wishing that they were something that they are not is a fool's errand.Bob Sutton:Yes, it is a fool's errand. And if we're going to do a little bit more empirically, there are a wholeset of studies, and sometimes academics call this prior joint experience. But you can look atstartups that are founded by people who have worked together. They tend to be moresuccessful at Stanford, way back to Yulet Packard. Instagram was founded by people whoworked together before. Into it, you can look at research on surgery that if your anesthesiologistand surgeon have done more procedures together, especially at the same hospital, youroutcomes are likely to be better. There is a point where relationships get stale and you've got tomake things fresh. But this idea of when people have worked together before, that they tend to be more effective, especially for difficult, complex tasks, is something that's very important. Sothis notion that working things out takes time is important.Shankar Vedantam:Bob Sutton is a psychologist at the Stanford School of Engineering. With Huggie Rao, he is coauthor of The Friction Project, How Smart Leaders Make the Right Things Easier and TheWrong Things Harder. Bob, thanks so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.Bob Sutton:Shankar, it's just been remarkable. And thank you for reading the book so closely. I felt like I'vehad a quiz on a book that I spent seven years writing, and I even forgot some parts. So thankyou.Shankar Vedantam:Well, you get an A+, Bob. You get an A+. Thank you. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden BrainMedia. Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy Paul, Kristin Wong, Laura Kwerel,Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury. Tara Boyle is our executiveproducer. I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor. If you know someone who would enjoy today'sepisode, or any of the episodes in our Innovation 2.0 series, please share it with them. Yourword of mouth recommendations make a huge difference in helping to connect new listeners tothe ideas we explore on Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon.