9. Let’s Practice Identifying & Applying These Three Heuristics
Practice Scenario & Questions
Example: Hiring committee
You are sitting on a hiring committee for a leadership position in a local organization. The position requires a specific level of education and a minimum of three years of relevant experience. Three candidates are being considered:
- James Thompson
- A Canadian-born Caucasian male
- Ten years of relevant experience
- Does not have the education required for the job but is in the process of obtaining it
- Ray Patel
- A male Canadian permanent resident originally from India
- Five years of relevant experience
- Has the required level of education
- Naya Hunt
- An Indigenous female local to the region
- 20 years of relevant experience and many accreditations
- Does not have the specific educational degree required
There are four people on the hiring committee. Three of them very quickly make up their minds and cast their votes — one for each of the three candidates. You are the fourth member.
What do you think could have led to their decisions — to choose who they chose and not the other candidates?
Is the representativeness heuristic applicable here? How exactly?
How about the availability heuristic?
How about anchoring?
Analyze this scenario in terms of heuristic reasoning and identify the outcome of such reasoning in terms of thought, emotion, and behaviour.
Then, consider what systematic/effortful processing may look like and what the outcomes may be.[3]