Persuadable: How Great Leaders Change Their Mind to Change the World
By Al Pittampalli

Persuadability is a critical skill
The book is about persuadability, a genuine willingness and ability to change your mind in the face of new evidence.
It is one of the most critical skills of modern leadership.
The willingness and the ability to change is essential in today's world.
Question pet beliefs
This involves actively seeking criticism and counterarguments for your long-standing beliefs.
Valid criticism, wherever it comes from, helps a leader improve.
Six practices of persuadable leaders
- Consider the opposite
- Update your belief incrementally
- Kill your darlings
- Take others’ perspectives
- Avoid being too persuadable
- Take on your own tribe
Strong leaders are supposed to be consistent
Our culture teaches us that strong leaders possess three Cs: confidence, conviction and consistency.
A good leader must also adapt
The enemy constantly changes and adapts, hence good leaders must also adapt.
Be actively open minded
Open-mindedness means being receptive to new information. Being actively open minded means seeking out unpleasant information before it hits you.
Why we often don’t see the truth
We are unwilling to see the truth because the truth threatens something we care about.
Upton Sinclair once wrote: “It is impossible to make a man understand something, when his salary depends on him not understanding it.”
Why we resist the truth
The most powerful resistance to truth comes when the truth threatens our identity.
Perils of information overload
Leaders cannot spend all their time soliciting and processing new information. This will paralyse them.
When it comes to the quality of any decision, the incremental value of more information diminishes over time.
Meetings are sometimes called to stall decisions
Meetings are the most convenient and socially accepted forums to stall decisions. It requires a good leader to force decisions.
Good decisions require a robust debate
But that cannot happen without unbiased, candid opinions at the table.
In many companies debate is seen as a zero sum game and being persuaded is tantamount to being defeated—nothing could be further from the truth.
Great leaders do change their minds
The more I researched, I realised that great leaders do change their minds and have always done so.
Responding to continuous feedback
We live in a world of continuous feedback and we need the organizational nimbleness to respond.
Practice and be attentive to feedback
The path to mastery in any field is not talent, it is practice.
And deliberate practice needs one critical element to improve—attentiveness to feedback.
We tend to reward consistency
Our brain is a prediction making machine, set up in a way that rewards consistency.
Integrity and consistency are often hard to separate in our mind.
People see inconsistency as hypocrisy
Inconsistency is a big winner for the media because audiences love nothing more than to jeer at hypocrisy.
Changing a decision is not inconsistency
When the facts change, so should our decisions.
Seek out all angles before deciding
Many leaders resort to motivated reasoning, i.e. start with a conclusion and adjust the argument accordingly. Good leaders seek a debate to consider all angles and opposite views before committing to an answer.
Look at multiple scenarios
If you want to consider the opposite, you should be willing to look at multiple scenarios before choosing one.
Think in greys
Human beings do not like ambiguity.
But to be persuadable, we need to move from thinking in black and white to thinking in grey.
Stay focused on your vision
Good leaders are stubborn on vision but flexible on details.
The worst can happen, but weak leaders amplify the fear
Worst case scenarios are always possibilities, and sometimes reality.
In organizations people are always thinking of worst case scenarios about restructuring, job losses, etc. and weak leaders amplify that feeling they hear and make things worse.
The power of an imagined future
What makes people quit is not the future but the imagined future.
Power and perspective
Power diminishes perspective taking.
Power and perspective are a terrific combination for leaders. Good leaders arrive at a good perspective beyond their own view.
Leaders solicit opinions through meetings
Meetings are often called with good intentions. A persuadable leader doesn’t want to be hasty and therefore solicits opinions to ensure the team is making the right decision.
Striving for perfection is silly
Leaders who strive for silly perfection are dinosaurs in this fast changing world.
Be receptive
The truth is the truth, whether it comes from your best friend or your worst enemy.
Persuadable: How Great Leaders Change Their Mind to Change the World
By Al Pittampalli