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Tyler Cowen Interview and 5 Takeaways
- How can you better identify the key traits of talented people?
These are the top 5 traits I look for when conversing with any potential candidate for a new role:
- Energy Level & Desire: A person’s energy
level is critical. Are you able to feel a surging desire from them to do
something, to work, cooperate, to achieve something?
- Social Intelligence: This is about how well people work with others. If they see a group, how quickly are they able to figure out, here's how the group works, and here's the role I should play in that group.
- Maximizing the Correct Things: Some smart people
work hard but maximize the wrong things, so look for people who can
figure out the proper hierarchies of what is truly important.
- Persistence & Durability: How likely is the person to stick through highs and lows and continue performing consistently?
- Happiness Level: On average, happy people seem to be more productive.
- How can you better leverage the talent that’s already in your orbit?
Someone with a single excellent idea can be worth so much more than a
perfectly good worker who doesn’t have a comparably valuable idea.
Because of increasing globalization, remote work, and AI, a good idea is
now multiplied many times more than it used to be. By our best
estimates, 20% to 40% of American economic growth has come from better
allocating talent since the 1960s.
To unlock this value, we need to start by looking for creative input
from a greater number of people, as well as from different types of
people. More people are energizers, creatives, and winners than we
think. Talent includes renowned CEOs, people running startups,
world-famous athletes, and cultural figures like Paul McCartney. But you
can also find them on a micro level. I run a podcast, and the sound
engineers contribute extremely useful ideas. They are creatives and
energizers. In part, they energize me; and they also see things that I
do not see. Train yourself at ‘talent appreciation’, the way you might
train yourself at art appreciation or music appreciation. It starts with
the wake-up call to be fully aware that the creative acts of your
individual talent and their judgment are truly central to the future of
your institution, more so than ever before.
- How can you better position existing talent inside your organization to maximize their impact?
The research shows people don’t change that much over time, so if
you’re trying to fit a square peg into a round hole, it probably won’t
work. At times, I succeeded in having people switch divisions; so it’s
important to have an open mind about what part of your institution the
person could work in. People are capable of learning, that’s a positive
fact, but most people stay who they are at their core. If someone is
introverted or disagreeable by nature, they will stay that way. Either
figure out how they can fit in, or you need to move in some other
direction.
- How can you ask the right questions to identify creatives, energizers, and winners?
Get prospective hires into a conversational mode on topics they care
about but are not prepared for. Find out what they’re interested in and
get them talking–baseball, The Beatles, Star Wars, whatever it may be–it
will help you see how they think, and how they interpret social
structures. Everyone will come prepared with an account of their own
strengths and weaknesses, what they learned from the last time they made
an error in their previous job; It’s fine to ask those things. You will
learn something but you won’t learn what makes that person tick.
Here’s an example of the ideal question I like to ask people: “What are
the open tabs in your web browsers right now?” What are they interested
in? What do they care about? The key is not so much to judge the
content of the tabs. It’s the level of enthusiasm, detail, and
involvement that you’re looking for.
When it comes to assessing durability and persistence, what I tend to
look for is simply people who started endeavors when they were fairly
young and were truly interested in them. It’s not proof of persistence,
but if they’re 19 and started something at 14, you’re going to see five
years of persistence. It’s a sign they might be on that campus of people
who just keep on going forever. I look at the earliness of the start.
Even if someone is 45, maybe they’ve been out of the workforce. What
projects did you start when you were 16? It’s something I would want to
know. Highly imperfect on my wishlist. If I could judge the persistence
of young people much better, that would be the number one thing on my
wishlist.
All good interview questions spoil within five or ten years, so it’s
not about memorizing the best questions. Instead, it’s about thinking
through how you bond with people during a conversation—to have a meeting
of the minds. If you’re good at that, the questions will come to you
because you are conversing. You don’t go out with a list of questions in
your everyday life. Most of all, as the interviewer, be trustworthy;
it’s important people trust you. If they perceive you as responsible,
your conversations will be much better. That’s more important than a
list of best questions.
- How could you better assess talent in political leaders?
I find it striking how hard it is to predict good political leadership.
For example, if you read the Charles Moore biography of Margaret
Thatcher, it was not obvious earlier in her career that she would be a
significant political leader. I’m not talking about whether you like
what she did or not. Clearly, she became Prime Minister, she was very
influential, including internationally. She was a chemist, which is
great, but I don’t think the best interviewer in the world would’ve seen
that in her.
I would say when it comes to political leaders, indeed, almost
everything else, the importance of keeping a truly open mind, the human
capacity for self-improvement is one of the best things you can do, and
it will make you happier, more optimistic, and more productive. I find
political leadership the hardest thing to forecast. Still, I think at
the end of the day, a political leader can only do so many things, and
you need to focus on how they communicate with the public. What two or
three ideas are they trying to bring to the discourse, even if they
don’t succeed with them now, those ideas might happen in 10 years.
You need to throw out so many of the other signals you are getting.
It’s hard to do because you’re used to looking for more signals, more
information to put together a more complete picture. Still, often for
political leaders, you can be a bit more accurate by throwing out a lot
of the information you’re getting because how good they are, just
doesn’t matter. They’re constrained. They have little time, and many
tasks, it’s not really a job that makes any sense. The presidency is a
job for 17 different people. So I’m not saying we can actually run it
that way. It’s really going to mess with your normal intuitions. And I
would just say, “Please keep an open mind, all the more.”
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