English: Groupthink is a psychological phenomenon where the desire for group cohesion and harmony overrides realistic appraisal of alternative courses of action. It leads to irrational decision-making by suppressing dissenting viewpoints.
1. The "Setup": Root Causes
High Group Cohesiveness: Strong bonds make members reluctant to "rock the boat."
Structural Faults: Isolation of the group, lack of impartial leadership, and lack of diverse social backgrounds.
High Stress: External threats or recent failures pressure the group to reach a quick, unanimous consensus.
2. Core Behavioral Symptoms
Illusion of Invulnerability: Excessive optimism and risk-taking.
Self-Censorship: Members suppress their own doubts to avoid conflict.
Pressure on Dissenters: Direct social pressure applied to anyone who questions the group's direction.
Mindguards: Self-appointed members who "protect" the leader from contradictory information.
3. Consequences of Failure
Incomplete Survey of Alternatives: Failure to look at other viable options.
Failure to Examine Risks: Overlooking the potential downsides of the preferred choice.
Poor Information Search: Only seeking out facts that support the group’s existing bias.
4. Management & Prevention
Assign a "Devil’s Advocate": Formally task a member to challenge every assumption.
Leader Neutrality: The leader should remain silent initially to avoid biasing the group.
Subgroup Deliberation: Break into smaller teams to discuss the same issue independently before merging ideas.