You’re Not as Good as You Think

Quick Insight

Self-Attribution is the mental error where people tend to attribute successful outcomes from decisions to their own actions and bad outcomes to external factors. If your vision is clouded by self-attribution, you can’t tell if past decisions were good or just lucky. So, you make the same decisions in the future. You may then learn a very expensive lesson.

Self-Attribution is the mental error where people tend to attribute successful outcomes from decisions to their own actions and bad outcomes to external factors.

Self-attribution is more commonly seen in

  • Important tasks

  • People with high self-esteem

  • People with a good prior record in a task

  • Competitive environments

  • Tasks that have delayed feedback


How does this play out in business? When CEOs or companies have success with their first acquisition, they:

  • Attribute too much of the success to their own actions

  • Become overconfident

  • They then proceed to destroy value by engaging in more acquisitions


If your vision is clouded by self-attribution, you can’t tell if past decisions were good or just lucky. You can’t learn from past decisions and strategies. So, you make the same decisions in the future. You may then learn a very expensive lesson. With severe self-attribution, you keep paying for the lesson but never learn from it.


Humility may be healthy for your bottom line.


- Rob Stephens
Founder of CFO Perspective and the Finance and Strategy Toolkit (FAST)


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