A big part of integrity is the ability to think for yourself. It’s the discipline to resist groupthink, to maintain your own judgment, and to stay principled even when the crowd is moving in the wrong direction.
When groupthink takes over, critical thinking collapses. Conformity replaces judgment. Teams develop an illusion of control, ignoring risks, ethics, and consequences. Creativity shrinks. Dissent disappears. And organizations make decisions that are louder than they are smart.
It happens when the loudest voices get mistaken for authority. When people who raise doubts are pressured to “get on board.” When silence is misread as agreement, creating a false sense of unanimity.
This is the moment when leaders must actually lead.
Leaders break the spell of groupthink by:
- inviting diverse viewpoints
- asking “tell me more” instead of choosing sides
- creating safe spaces for honest debate
- breaking large groups into smaller, more thoughtful discussions
- recognizing and praising robust, respectful disagreement
This doesn’t mean everyone ends up in total agreement. It means the conversation shifts from who’s right to what’s right — from ego to strategy, from noise to clarity, from opinion to what’s best for customers.
What you don’t want is the opposite: hands thrown in the air, side conversations, frustration, and disengagement.
That’s what happens when leaders aren’t skilled in guiding conversations, setting goals, or building teams. Give your leaders the training, tools, and support to facilitate real dialogue. Help them create environments where independent thinking is expected, not punished.
And remind everyone that two heads — especially two different heads — are better than one today.
George Carlin (1937 – 2008): American stand-up comedian, social critic, actor, and author.






