March 12, 2008
Biznology Blog by Mike Moran
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The Misguided Quest for Control
You've been there. Perhaps you're in the supermarket minding your own business when you are suddenly struck by a scene. A child is totally out of control, screaming, carrying on, and you are asking yourself, "How come that parent can't control that child?"
If you're a parent yourself, you might be telling yourself something else, too. "The parents of that child must be doing something horribly wrong to put up with behavior like that." Why is it that we reflexively blame parents for their children's misbehavior?
Because it gives us the illusion of control.
As parents, we desperately want to think we have control over how our kids turn out. So we tell ourselves that because we don't make the mistakes those other parents make, then our kids will be OK. So every time we see a kid who has problems, we want to blame the parents, just to make ourselves feel more in control. Because if it isn't the parents fault, then (oh no!) those problems could befall our kids, too! Scary.
Unfortunately, we don't have as much control as we wish we did. Sure, parents are a huge influence over their kids, but sometimes kids don't turn out the way we expect even when we did a good job.
I remember being the person in that supermarket asking myself what was wrong with the parents that allowed that kind of behavior, and my wife brought me up short with her typical wisdom. "How do you know what problems that child has? He could be autistic or have some other wrenching problem those poor parents cope with every minute of their lives. For all you know, that kid is having a good day."
Wow.
She's right. We tell ourselves these things to give ourselves the illusion of control. It's a natural human impulse that soothes us in times of upset. But it might not help us to think clearly and rationally about the situations we are in and it certainly doesn't help us provide help to other parents.
Marketers, unfortunately are human beings too, and suffer from similar mindsets. (You knew I would eventually get around to talking about marketing, huh?) So, when you see a company suffer a huge public relations black eye, do you say to yourself, "Boy, that PR team really screwed that one up"? When a rival product begins to attract denigrating word-of-mouth, do you tell yourself, "Those guys just do not know how to practice message control"?
Or do you look at those experiences as a cautionary tale?
As marketers and PR professionals, we need to resist the impulse to explain away the problems of others with incompetence. While it's true that some problems really are screw-ups, many are simply the luck of the draw. We'd love to believe that our superior decisions, policies, messages, and other assets determine our success and protect us from similar travails, but they don't. We don't have the control over our situations that we want, and we need to be ready for something unforeseen to happen without it ruining our entire self-image of competence.
Can you watch others deal with situations and learn from them, or must you explain them away to soothe yourself? Do you analyze things you see and ask yourself what you'd do in that situation, or do you tell yourself that you can control things so that would never happen?
"That will never happen to me" is probably something that many people have said to themselves. And it did happen to some of them. Are you learning how to handle difficult situations or are you just telling yourself that you are in control?
Posted by mikemoran at March 12, 2008 1:35 PM
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Comments
Well said Mike!
There but for the grace of God...
Much weathering by time and experience has taught me to learn from the mistakes of others - its easier than learning those lessons yourself.
The challenge is to instill that kind of objectivity in those you work with.
Posted by: Craig Klein at March 13, 2008 3:20 AM
