We rarely make decisions alone. We solve problems in meetings, coordinate across teams, and rely on one another to make sense of complex situations. Critical thinking, then, isn’t just an individual skill—it’s a collaborative one. When we think with others, we expand our perspective and improve the quality of our decisions.
This webinar explored what critical thinking looks like in shared environments, where assumptions, group dynamics, and habitual advice-giving can cloud our judgment. Whether you're leading discussions, working through tough conversations, or helping a team slow down and analyze a situation, this course taught practical ways to ask better questions and reach clearer, more grounded decisions together.
Participants learned how to:
- recognize how habits like advice-giving can limit collaborative thinking.
- reflect on how assumptions and emotions influence group decisions.
- ask questions that lead to clearer, more productive conversations.
- support others in clarifying facts, testing assumptions, and broadening perspective.
Nan Gesche, MA, is an educator, speaker, and coach who aims to “help people play well together.” She has guided organizations through change management, resiliency building, and conflict management for over 20 years.
Key Takeaways
1. Critical Thinking Is a Team Sport
Critical thinking is often treated as an individual skill, but most real-world decisions happen collaboratively. Effective decision-making improves when teams combine different perspectives, experiences, and insights.
Insight:
No single person has the full picture. Expanding the “decision table” improves outcomes.
2. Speed vs. Effectiveness
Organizations often prioritize speed, but rushing decisions can create rework, misalignment, and frustration.
A slower, more thoughtful approach that includes stakeholders often leads to more durable solutions that people will actually implement.
Key principle:
A 70% solution with buy-in can be more effective than a 100% analytical solution nobody supports.
3. The “Internal Decision Team”
Good critical thinking involves multiple internal perspectives:
- Head — logic, data, analysis
- Heart — values, emotions, people impacted
- Gut — experience and intuition
- Open mind — willingness to accept new information
- Others — external perspectives
Leaving a “seat at the table” for others prevents narrow thinking.
4. Beware of “Thin Thinking”
Thin thinking happens when decisions are:
- Fast
- Comfortable
- Based only on one's own perspective
It often occurs due to time pressure or habit but produces weaker results.
Better approach: broaden perspectives before deciding.
5. Stop Giving Advice — Start Asking Questions
When someone asks for help, people often jump into advice mode. But unsolicited advice rarely sticks.
Better practice: ask thoughtful questions that help others think.
Examples:
- “What part of the project worked best?”
- “What should we change next time?”
- “What helped move us closer to the goal?”
Open-ended “what” and “how” questions encourage deeper analysis.
6. Reframe Decisions as Problems to Solve
A powerful technique is to reframe decisions as broader problems.
Example from the webinar:
- A manager told to fire someone reframed the issue.
- Instead of executing the decision, he asked:
“What larger problem are we trying to solve?”
The team collaborated and found an alternative solution (temporary pay cuts and flexible scheduling), preserving morale and productivity.
7. Expand the Stakeholder Lens
Teams often underestimate how many people are affected by decisions.
Consider stakeholders across:
- Inputs – suppliers, employees, contributors
- Throughputs – the team executing the work
- Outputs – customers, partners, end users
Better stakeholder awareness improves decision quality.
8. Build Both Support Networks and Challenge Networks
People tend to seek advice from those who think similarly.
But effective thinking requires both:
- Support network — people who reinforce ideas
- Challenge network — people who stretch thinking
Diverse perspectives reveal blind spots.
9. Watch the “Ladder of Inference”
Humans often:
- Observe limited data
- Interpret it quickly
- Create a story
- Act on that story
Example:
Someone leaves a meeting early →
We assume they’re rude or disengaged.
But the real reason might be an emergency or competing obligation.
Structured thinking helps prevent faulty assumptions.
10. Structured Tools Improve Group Thinking
Structured processes ensure more voices are heard and reduce bias.
Examples mentioned:
- Polling tools
- Word clouds
- Multi-voting
- Decision matrices
- Affinity diagrams
- RACI frameworks
These tools help teams collect input efficiently without chaos.
11. Engagement Drives Implementation
Even the best analysis fails if people don’t support the decision.
Engagement increases:
- Trust
- Motivation
- Creativity
- Follow-through
Implementation success is the ultimate test of decision quality.
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