Assessing for Cognitive Flexibility

For decades, the real estate industry has struggled with failed hires.

Hiring managers engage prospects with high hopes, but those hopes are often dashed soon after an agent begins their new career.

I’ve occasionally addressed this topic in previous posts and some of our clients have been successful in reducing their failed-hire rate by more than 50%.

How did they do it?  

Over time, they made small changes in their selection and onboarding process to improve their success rates.

Here is another small change to add to the list:

Start assessing for cognitive flexibility during your interviews.

Researchers Trevor Robbins, Annabel Chen and Zoe Kourtzi define cognitive flexibly this way.

Cognitive flexibility is a skill that enables a person to switch between different concepts, or to adapt behavior to achieve goals in a novel or changing environment.

It is essentially about learning to learn and being able to be flexible about the way an individual learns.

Cognitive flexibility provides the ability for a person to see what they’re doing is not leading to success and to make the appropriate changes to achieve it.

It’s easy to see why this skill would be helpful to a new agent trying to learn real estate.

In our next Insight, we’ll learn how to assess for it in an interview and grow it in yourself and others.