An analysis of thousands of Slack messages shows how groups can adjust their cognitive diversity
“Diversity means lots of things,†says Amir Goldberg, an associate professor of organizational behavior at Stanford Graduate School of Business. “These days, it evokes the idea of race or gender, but it’s also about how people think.“
Beyond their demographic differences, people working in a group will likely think differently about a collaborative task. That cognitive diversity can be helpful — or not. “In an organization, there’s tension between people who have incongruent ways of thinking about a specific problem to solve,†Goldberg says.
It’s widely thought that brainstorming how to create a better app or product requires a range of ideas and perspectives, while getting down to the business of execution is best handled with greater alignment around how to proceed. “The assumption,†Goldberg explains, “is that intellectual diversity is good for creating novelty and creative problem-solving, but not necessarily good for efficient coordination.â€
On the surface, it may seem like a team will be good at only one of those things, depending on its level of intellectual diversity. “But that’s a blatant simplification,†Goldberg says, “because teams can also modulate†how they apply their variety or consistency of thought to a given task.
To better understand this dynamic, Goldberg and collaborators Melissa Valentineopen in new window and Katharina Lixopen in new window of Stanford and Sameer Srivastavaopen in new window of Berkeley Haas studied hundreds of thousands of Slack messages sent by software development teams working remotely. Using computational linguistics tools, the researchers measured how team members’ ideas diverged and converged over time.
This piece originally appeared in Stanford Business Insights from Stanford Graduate School of Business. To receive business ideas and insights from Stanford GSB click here: (To sign up : https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/about/emails ) ]