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In this episode of Gap Cognition: Business by Design, we explore one of the most overlooked truths in organisational performance: skills may get someone into a role, but habits determine whether they succeed in it. Modern behavioural science, organisational psychology, and neuroscience all point to the same conclusion — behaviour is a more powerful predictor of performance than capability alone.

We unpack the research behind this, starting with a landmark Duke University study showing that 40–50% of human behaviour is habitual. That means nearly half of what people do at work happens automatically, shaped by deeply embedded behaviour patterns rather than conscious decision-making. Neuroscientific findings from MIT further show how the brain shifts repeated behaviours from the prefrontal cortex (thinking mode) to the basal ganglia (automatic mode), making habits fast, predictable, and energy-efficient.

This matters because organisations often hire, promote, and measure performance based on skills — yet skills explain only a fraction of long-term success. According to Harvard Business Review and McKinsey research, up to 70% of performance variability comes down to behavioural habits: ownership, prioritisation, resilience, follow-through, attention to detail, and communication style. In other words, skills tell you what someone can do; habits tell you what they will do consistently.

Through practical examples, we explore how a high-skill employee with poor habits often underperforms, while someone with moderate skill but strong habits frequently becomes a top contributor. We also look at how leadership behaviour directly shapes team performance, clarity, and culture — confirming Gallup’s finding that a manager’s behaviour accounts for 70% of team engagement outcomes.

This episode also provides practical guidance for leaders and HR professionals:

  • Identify the core behavioural habits required for each role.
  • Use behavioural analytics to understand natural habits and team dynamics.
  • Design performance systems around behaviour, not just tasks.
  • Coach micro-habits rather than relying on talent alone.
  • Hire for behaviour and train for skill.

The message is simple but transformative: skills are teachable, but habits are the engine behind performance. When leaders focus on behavioural alignment, organisations unlock higher productivity, stronger accountability, better collaboration, and long-term cultural stability.

If you want to understand the real drivers of workplace effectiveness — and learn how to build teams that perform naturally, consistently, and sustainably — this episode will give you the insights and tools to get started.

INTRODUCTION TO GAP COGNITION

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3 episodes