The Ig Nobel Prize is given out by a group called Improbable Research, which celebrates "achievements that first make people laugh, and then make them think. The prizes are intended to celebrate the unusual, honor the imaginative — and spur people's interest in science, medicine, and technology." The 2010 awards were handed out on September 30th, and one one of the doctoral students I work with, Isaac Waisberg, pointed out that one of the prizes was awarded to a simulation that demonstrated -- if the Peter Principle is true -- organizations would be better off promoting employees randomly rather than promoting people until they they reach their level of incompetence. Isaac knew I was interested in The Peter Principle as I wrote the foreword to the 40th Anniversary edition. Here is a link to the PDF of the article and here is the abstract:

The Peter Principle Revisited: A Computational Study

Authors: Alessandro Pluchino, Andrea Rapisarda, Cesare Garofalo

In the late sixties the Canadian psychologist Laurence J. Peter advanced an apparently paradoxical principle, named since then after him, which can be summarized as follows: {\it 'Every new member in a hierarchical organization climbs the hierarchy until he/she reaches his/her level of maximum incompetence'}. Despite its apparent unreasonableness, such a principle would realistically act in any organization where the mechanism of promotion rewards the best members and where the mechanism at their new level in the hierarchical structure does not depend on the competence they had at the previous level, usually because the tasks of the levels are very different to each other. Here we show, by means of agent based simulations, that if the latter two features actually hold in a given model of an organization with a hierarchical structure, then not only is the Peter principle unavoidable, but also it yields in turn a significant reduction of the global efficiency of the organization. Within a game theory-like approach, we explore different promotion strategies and we find, counterintuitively, that in order to avoid such an effect the best ways for improving the efficiency of a given organization are either to promote each time an agent at random or to promote randomly the best and the worst members in terms of compete nce .

This is just a simulation, not an empirical test. But the virtues of randomness are also found in an earlier experiment that showed groups that randomly selected leaders performed better than those that were asked to selected a leader from among their peers. Here is the summary I wrote in Weird Ideas That Work:



Further evidence for the virtues of making random decisions comes from a pair of experiments in Australia by S. Alexander Haslam and his colleagues. Their experiments compared the performance of small problem solving groups (3 to 5 people) that were asked to select their own leaders with groups that were randomly assigned a leader (i.e., a person whose name appeared either first or last in the alphabet). These experiments involved 91 groups that worked on one of three closely related group decision-making exercises, the “winter survival task,” the “desert survival task,” or the “fallout survival task.” Each of these small groups of college students developed a strategy for ranking potentially useful items for the particular task, and their decisions were scored relative to expert ratings. Both experiments showed that groups that had randomly assigned leaders performed significantly better than those that had selected their own leaders. Random assignment was shown to be superior to groups that had used either an informal process where they selected leaders by “whatever means you see fit” or a formal process where each group member completed 10 self-report questions on a leadership skills inventory that had been shown to predict managerial success in prior studies. Leaders who scored the highest on the inventory were assigned to lead groups that used the formal process. There were no significant differences between groups that used an informal or a formal process. Both had inferior performance to groups with randomly selected leaders.

Haslam and his colleagues believe that the process of selecting a leader in these experiments focused attention on differences between group members, which undermined the group’s sense of shared identity and purpose, which in turn, undermined performance. Instead of thinking about how to solve the problem together, or having a “united we stand, divided we fall” mentality, they thought about differences between them that were unrelated to the task -- like who had more prestige in the group and why. My interpretation is similar. I would add that the leaders who are given a mandate to be in charge of a group often – without realizing – start imposing their individual will too strongly, which can stifle the range of ideas that are seriously considered by the group. The researchers admit that they have suggested only one possible explanation for these findings, and acknowledge that a random process of selecting a leader is probably inferior to a systematic process for groups that do other tasks. But these findings are intriguing because they force many of us – both practitioners and researchers -- to see an old problem in a new way, they spark the “vu ja de” mentality. They suggest our assumptions about how to select a leader may, at least at times, be flawed.

I am not arguing that we ought to give-up and start selecting and promoting leaders randomly. But it is interesting to consider randomness because doing so challenges our assumptions about the rationality of what we do in life Indeed, speaking of randomness, last year I heard that Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman (he won the real prize, not to Ig) was running a simulation that seemed to show that if the CEOs of Fortune 500 companies were randomly reassigned to different companies, there would be no significant impact on firm performance. I don't know what happened to that research, or even how accurate that rumor is, all I can find is this WSJ article where he chimes in on the subject. If anyone knows more, please comment.

P.S. The reference for the experiment is Haslam, S. A, C. McGarty, R. A. Eggins, B. E. Morrison, & K. J. Reynolds, “Inspecting the Emperor’s Clothes: Evidence that Randomly Selected Leaders can Enhance Group Performance”, Group Dynamics: Theory, Process and Researc h 2 (1998): 168-18

P.P.S. For another post on randomness, check out this one about decision-making among the Nasakpai Indians.

