I was getting ready to board a flight with my husband, the second leg
of a flight to our final destination.
I travel light and carry my luggage on board. With me was my red roller-bag – the one that has an
interesting, deceiving contour. It
slopes up, but the highest part of the case is the same height as a normal
roller-bag. It fits in the
overhead bin, handle first versus wheels first. It’s the same size as all the other roller-bags.
The gate agent stopped me and said, “You’ll have to check the bag – it won’t fit.” “Yes it will,” I said. “Wheels
first?” he asked. “No, it fits ….” I started to reply
before he cut me off. “Then you’ll have to check it,” he
scowled. As I began to measure it
to prove that its dimensions were a standard fit, my husband joined the
conversation. “It fit in the overhead bin
just fine on the last flight.” The
gate agent finally acquiesced, after wasting precious
time during the boarding process – all because my suitcase had a slightly
different look. I understood
his concern – that if I placed it in the bin horizontally it would take up too
much room.
We were early to board, and after settling in my seat, I observed one
gentleman very nonchalantly placing two bags horizontally in the overhead bin –
not appearing to care about other passengers. I couldn’t help but wonder if he was scolded by the gate
agent as I was. I observed a woman
place a carry-on bag that should have gone under her seat in the overhead bin
without a care in the world taking room where another roller-bag could have
gone.
We make assumptions all the
time. Sometimes they are based on
people’s characteristics, sometimes prior experiences. We make assumptions about new or
different things or ideas because we've had no experience with them.
Ninety-five percent of what we do, we do with an unconscious mind. The gate
agent was so focused on the shape of my suitcase, he lost sight of the other
passengers. Focus is good – I certainly want the pilot focused on his job. When
focus becomes rigid, it runs the risk of taking all judgment out of the
process.
Bottom line is that when we
make assumptions, we're looking backwards and making judgments. We're blocking our ability to see how
the person, thing or idea can contribute to the organization. We're letting our biases overshadow our
thinking. We’re stifling
creativity and creativity and innovation are important in today's business
environment.
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