Make decisions through debate, not declaration
Multipliers use real debate to engage the team’s best thinking before deciding; Diminishers use meetings to announce.
Why it works
Declarative decision-making — announcing the answer — shuts off input from the people who might have the most relevant information. Debate-based decision-making is not democracy; it is intelligence-gathering under the cover of deliberation. The leader who hears the real objections and alternatives before deciding makes better decisions and produces stronger commitment to the outcome — because the team knows the alternatives were genuinely considered.
How to do it
- Frame decisions as questions requiring debate before they are made: "We need to decide X — I want to hear the case for each option."
- Assign advocates for positions you’re uncertain about, so the view gets a fair hearing even if no one spontaneously holds it.
- Be explicit about when debate has ended and decision has been made — the transition from open debate to committed execution needs a clear marker.
- After the debate, make the decision and require commitment from the team even from those who disagreed.
Evidence
Procedural fairness (voice effect) research shows that people commit more strongly to decisions when their input was genuinely considered in the process. Debate-based decision-making operationalizes this at the team level. (observational)
Procedural justice research is well supported; Wiseman’s Debate Maker discipline is her leadership framing of that principle. Time cost of genuine debate is a real trade-off that must be weighed against the quality and commitment benefits.
Sources
- Lind & Tyler (1988), The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice — voice effect and fairness perceptions
Common mistake
Running the appearance of a debate when you have already decided — people immediately detect the choreography, which is more damaging to trust than a transparent announcement would have been.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you structure a decision-point conversation: designing the debate that gives each real option a fair hearing before you decide, and preparing the questions that pull out the best case for each position.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).