Disagree and commit

Management principle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Disagree and commit is a management principle that individuals are allowed to disagree while a decision is being made, but that once a decision has been made, everybody must commit to implementing the decision. Disagree and commit is a method of avoiding the consensus trap, in which the lack of consensus leads to inaction.[1][2]

History

Scott McNealy used the phrase as early as some time between 1983 and 1991, as part of the line "Agree and commit, disagree and commit, or get out of the way".[3]:39[4]

The concept has also been attributed to Andrew Grove at Intel.[5][6]:112[7]

Amazon added "Have Backbone; Disagree and Commit" as one of its leadership principles some time in 2010–2011.[8] Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos mentioned the term in his "2016 Letter to Shareholders".[9]

Organizations that have used the principle

See also

References

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