@chanaseiser
Seek diverse perspectives – Actively consult colleagues from different teams, backgrounds, or levels before major decisions.
Practice structured reasoning – Use simple frameworks like “5 Whys”, SWOT, or Premortem (“What could go wrong and why?”).
Slow down important judgments – Force yourself to list pros, cons, and alternatives before saying yes/no.
Read opposing views – When analyzing data or proposals, deliberately search for evidence that challenges your initial opinion.
Reflect after decisions – Weekly or monthly, review one key decision: What went well? What evidence did I miss? What would I do differently?
Ask better questions – Replace “Do you agree?” with “What am I potentially overlooking here?” or “What would disprove this?”
Consistency beats intensity. Small daily habits compound faster than occasional deep thinking sessions.https://hbr.org/2019/05/3-simple-habits-to-improve-your-critical-thinking