Entrepreneurship

Why Jeff Bezos Wants You To ‘Disagree And Commit’

jeff bezos-amazon-india-seller

Inc42 Daily Brief

Stay Ahead With Daily News & Analysis on India’s Tech & Startup Economy

…Use the phrase “disagree and commit.” This phrase will save a lot of time. If you have conviction on a particular direction even though there’s no consensus, it’s helpful to say, “Look, I know we disagree on this but will you gamble with me on it? Disagree and commit?” By the time you’re at this point, no one can know the answer for sure, and you’ll probably get a quick yes. – Jeff Bezos

The one thing I have heard, seen and experienced is how the leaders in different bands feel shackled because their leader (or manager as they call) doesn’t buy into the idea. Both sides of the coin are obvious cases:

  1. People had different ideas. If they don’t get buy-in and their ideas go nowhere, they will feel demotivated. After a few trials, they will be like — ‘I don’t care, either way, my idea is going to get shot down’.
  2. On the flip side, the leader is a different person and might have different thoughts. So he/she might not be able to agree. Though they want their team to be motivated, they are not able to buy in.

This is where Bezos’ advice comes handy. It is very simple — ‘disagree and commit’. Why it caught my attention so much is because I have done it so many times during my startup time and these days as well.

During our startup time, it was very common (like many good startups) to have disagreements and ferocious conversations amongst co-founders (ours were more ferocious than usual since we have been friends for 10+ years too). One of those conversations was about – what is the best channel/style of go-to-market we should focus? One of us was convinced that it was content marketing while I was totally not into it. As usual, we had our set of arguments and finally I ‘disagreed and committed’.

Disagreeing and committing is NOT about just saying it, it is also about trying your best to support what you committed to. In other words, you should try hard to prove yourself wrong. It may sound counter-intuitive at first, but once you realise that all your thoughts are not right, it is easy to digest.

In the above example, I committed to trying to see whether content marketing is a good GTM. I spent time, put effort, did research and wrote 2 blog posts to the best of my ability (the basic argument was — if we push content well, it will fly). There are many other cases where I said ‘happy to be proven wrong’. All these were cases where I ‘disagreed and committed’.

BTW — if you are the leader and you cannot take a gamble on your team’s thoughts once in a while, it means that you don’t trust your team. Then, it is time to fire someone, either yourself or the team.

This Hasn’t Worked Out For Me

It wasn’t super successful because I wasn’t explicitly telling my team that I was ‘disagreeing and committing’. I couldn’t put it across as beautifully as Bezos could. I think explicitly stating that to your team is as important as you committing internally.

When I saw Jeff’s note, it suddenly occurred to me. I realised what I was doing wrong. Immediately I pinged my team on Slack and gave the excerpt from the Amazon shareholder’s letter with a small footnote — ‘this is what I was doing all the while 🙂 ’

Not sure whether it is going to make the strategy 100% effective, but I’m sure it is gonna improve the overall dynamics.

BTW, you should read the full letter here. Jeff goes on to explain what are the other advantages of ‘disagreeing and committing’. Since I can never convey it so well, I’m not trying to.


[This post by Arjun R Pillai first appeared on Medium and has been reproduced with permission.]

Note: We at Inc42 take our ethics very seriously. More information about it can be found here.

Inc42 Daily Brief

Stay Ahead With Daily News & Analysis on India’s Tech & Startup Economy

Recommended Stories for You