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Harvey Mason Junior's decision-making process is rooted in his background in basketball and songwriting. He builds a team of diverse experts, gathers specialized insights, and fosters an environment where the best idea wins, regardless of hierarchy. This collaborative approach precedes any fast decisions.

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Figma CEO Dylan Field applies a design process to leadership. For critical decisions, he intentionally explores multiple paths and their connections (divergence) before committing to one (convergence). He notes the key leadership skill is learning when to converge slowly for strategy versus quickly for execution.

Leaders often feel they must have all the answers, which stifles team contribution. A better approach is to hire domain experts smarter than you, actively listen to their ideas, and empower them. This creates a culture where everyone learns and the entire company's performance rises.

FanDuel CEO Amy Howe adopted this McKinsey principle, which requires even junior employees to voice contrary opinions. This creates an environment where diverse perspectives are heard, ultimately leading to more robust and well-vetted company decisions.

Don't make high-stakes decisions in a silo. Involve stakeholders throughout the discovery and analysis process. Having finance review your P&L or sales weigh in on customer pain builds shared context and turns your recommendation from 'your bet' into 'our bet.'

Effective creative leadership moves beyond being a final gatekeeper in an 'approval theater.' The goal is to install judgment in the team by providing excellent inputs (briefs, data) and using early feedback rounds to collaboratively transfer the decision-making framework, empowering the team to make the right calls themselves.

Corporate politics stems from misaligned incentives that encourage lobbying for self-interest. A CEO can dismantle this by explicitly rewarding collaboration, even if the outcome is imperfect. Valuing how a decision impacts team motivation over simply having the 'right' answer fosters a company-first culture.

For high-stakes initiatives, a single leader cannot be the expert in everything. Proactively build a 'dream team' of specialists from legal, marketing, and other domains. Leverage them as an internal advisory board to pressure-test ideas and ensure the process is sound, even if the outcome is uncertain.

A leader's job isn't just to provide answers but to articulate the reasoning behind them, like showing work on a math problem. This allows team members to understand the underlying frameworks, debate them effectively, and apply the same point of view independently, which is crucial for scaling leadership.

Egnyte's CEO believes that consensus is the "shortest path to mediocrity." Instead of large group meetings seeking the lowest common denominator, critical decisions are delegated to and driven by small, empowered teams of three. This fosters ownership, speed, and avoids watered-down outcomes.

For valuable strategic input, convene a large group of the company's highest performers, regardless of their level or title. Including top individual contributors in vision-setting often yields better insights than a meeting of only top executives.