Olivier Sibony
Olivier Sibony | |
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Born | 1967 (age 57–58) |
Citizenship | French |
Alma mater | HEC Paris |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Business, Economics |
Institutions | McKinsey & Company, HEC Paris |
Website | oliviersibony.com |
Olivier Sibony (born 1967) is a French academic and author known for his research on behavioral strategy and for his work on the impact of heuristics and biases on strategic decision-making and procedures to enhance the quality of decisions.[1] He is the author of several popular books and the co-author of the New York Times best-seller Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment, with Daniel Kahneman and Cass R. Sunstein.[2]
Sibony is Professor of strategy and management at HEC Paris, where he received the Vernimmen Prize for teaching excellence in 2020.[3] He is also affiliated with Saïd Business School at Oxford University as an Associate Fellow.[4]
Early life and education
Olivier Sibony was born in 1967 in Paris, France.[1] After his Baccalauréat at Lycée Louis-Le-Grand and classes préparatoires at Lycée Carnot, he attended HEC Paris, graduating in 1988.[3]
In 2017, Sibony defended his Ph.D. thesis at Université Paris Dauphine under the supervision of Professor Stéphanie Dameron.[5] His topic was "Understanding and preventing error in strategic decision processes: the contribution of behavioral strategy".[6]
Career
From 1991 to 2015, Olivier Sibony worked at McKinsey & Company, where he was elected partner in 1997 and senior partner in 2004.[5][3]
In 2015, Sibony joined the faculty of HEC Paris where he is currently Professor (Education Track) in the Strategy department.[3] Sibony is also an Associate Fellow of Said Business School at Oxford University.[4]
Since 2017, Sibony holds the title of Knight in the Legion of Honor, one of the highest French awards for contributions to French society.[7]
Research
Sibony’s research interests center on applying insights from judgment and decision-making to business strategy, a field he was among the first to name "Behavioral Strategy."[3] He has written extensively about the effect of cognitive biases on strategic decisions and explored ways to identify and mitigate biases.[3]
Throughout his work, Sibony emphasizes the danger of letting cognitive biases affect strategic decisions[8] and the importance of procedures to protect them.[9] [10] In his early work You’re about to make a terrible mistake], he proposes the concept of decision architecture as a way to deliberately design decision processes in order to reduce their vulnerability to cognitive biases.[11] In his later publications, he advocates decision hygiene—a set of techniques aimed at reducing boht bias and noise, the unwanted and unpredictable variability of judgments. Sibony recommends shifting from intuitive to deliberate processes by using checklists, premortems, and formal decision protocols. He also proposes the use of noise audits and independent assessments to avoid relying solely on the judgment of individual experts.[12] Sibony argues that organizations should design their decision processes with the same rigor they apply to operations or finance, embedding discipline and accountability into strategic choices. He has written numerous articles and case studies on these topics, which have been published in leading business publications such as Harvard Business Review, Sloan Management Review, California Management Review, and McKinsey Quarterly.[13]
Since 2025, Sibony has contributed to the discourse on corporate diversity by challenging common assumptions about its benefits[14] and about the role cognitive biases play in the lack of diversity.[15] Rather than focusing solely on demographic representation, Sibony emphasizes the importance of cognitive diversity the inclusion of individuals with differing mental models and problem-solving approachesas a driver of better decision-making. [16][17]
He critiques the instrumentalist rhetoric that portrays diversity as automatically enhancing performance, arguing instead that without deliberate design and friction management, diverse teams can underperform, and that the ethical rationale for diversity and inclusion should be sufficient.[18] While recognizing the prevalence of stereotypes [19]and the value of setting quantitative targets.[20]
He draws on behavioral science to advocate for structured decision processes that mitigate conformity pressures and enable dissenting views to surface productively.[21] His work seeks to reconcile the goals of inclusion and organizational effectiveness, proposing evidence-based frameworks for selecting, integrating, and leading cognitively diverse teams.[22]
Selected publications
Books
- Kahneman, D., Sibony, O. & Sunstein, C. (2021). Noise. A Flaw in Human Judgement. New York: Little Brown Spark.
- Sibony, O. (2020). You're About to Make a Terrible Mistake: How Biases Distort Decision-Making and What You Can Do to Fight Them. New York: Little, Brown Spark. ISBN 978-1-80075-001-2.
- Garrette, Bernard; Phelps, Corey; Sibony, Olivier (2018), "The Most Important Skill You Never Learned", Cracked it!, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 1–14, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-89375-4_1, ISBN 978-3-319-89374-7, retrieved 2024-07-10
- French : (2021) Trouvez-moi la solution ! Les méthodes de résolution de problèmes des meilleurs consultants en stratégie. Paris : Flammarion (Clés des Champs).
- Sibony, O. (2020). Vous allez redécouvrir le management ! 40 clés scientifiques pour prendre de meilleures décisions. Paris : Flammarion.
- Garrette, B., Lehmann-Ortega, L., Leroy, F., Dussauge. P., Durand, R., Pointeau, B. & Sibony, O. (2019). STRATEGOR. Toute la stratégie de la start-up à la multinationale (Livres en Or, 8th ed)
Articles in popular press
- Kahneman, D., Sibony, O. & Sunstein, C. (18 May 2021). For a Fairer World, It’s Necessary First to Cut Through the ‘Noise’. New York Times.[23]
- Sibony, O. (25 April 2020). « Experts, décideurs ou simples observateurs, nous sommes tous affectés par des biais cognitifs ». Le Monde.[24]
- Sibony, O. (19 March 2020, mise à jour 20 April 2020). Comment avons-nous pu nous aveugler à ce point ? Ces biais qui ont retardé la prise de conscience face au virus. Philonomist.[25]
References
- ^ a b "About Olivier". Olivier Sibony. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ "Home". The Noise Book. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ a b c d e f "Olivier SIBONY, Professeur (Education Track)". HEC Paris (in French). Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ a b "Olivier Sibony | Saïd Business School". www.sbs.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ a b "Olivier Sibony, Affiliate Professor". HEC Paris. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ Comprendre et prévenir l’erreur récurrente dans les processus de décision stratégique : l’apport de la Behavioral Strategy. Retrieved 10 July 2024
- ^ "Décret du 14 avril 2017 portant promotion et nomination". www.legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ "Dirigeants, tous biaisés ?". Les Echos (in French). 2025-07-04. Archived from the original on 2025-07-24. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ "Olivier Sibony". The Decision Lab. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ philomag (2024-01-21). "Olivier Sibony : "Il arrive que de bonnes décisions donnent de mauvais résultats" | Philosophie magazine". www.philomag.com (in French). Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ "Behavioral Strategy and the Strategic Decision Architecture of the Firm". California Management Review. 2017-05-01. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ Bretonnier, Propos recueillis par Jean-Michel (2020-05-26). "Olivier Sibony: « On exige des experts une grande certitude dans une période de grande incertitude»". La Voix du Nord (in French). Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ "Olivier SIBONY | HEC Paris, Paris | HEC | Strategy | Research profile".
- ^ "Olivier Sibony : « Il n'y a pas de lien entre la diversité et la performance globale d'une entreprise »". www.latribune.fr (in French). 2025-05-23. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ "Face aux impasses des politiques de diversité, des idées pour une culture d'entreprise vraiment inclusive". Le Nouvel Obs (in French). 2025-06-12. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ Taibi, Nidal (2025-07-05). "Olivier Sibony: «Les entreprises se veulent méritocratiques, mais beaucoup sont "miroirocratiques"»". Le Vif (in French). Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ "Olivier Sibony : "Arrêtons de dire que la diversité rend les entreprises plus performantes"". L'Express (in French). 2025-02-26. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ Kerdellant, Christine. "La diversité est-elle rentable ?". Les Echos.
- ^ philomag (2025-01-07). "Olivier Sibony : "Les entreprises sont les derniers endroits où l'on peut avoir des stéréotypes éhontés " | Philosophie magazine". www.philomag.com (in French). Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ Revol, Michel (2025-03-07). "Quotas de femmes dans le management des entreprises : « Il y a besoin d'un électrochoc »". Le Point (in French). Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ Miel, Morgane (2025-03-13). "Olivier Sibony, professeur à HEC : «Si vous manquez de femmes dans votre entreprise, c'est que vos dirigeants sont choisis sur des critères qui ne sont pas les bons»". Madame Figaro (in French). Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ "Avec Olivier Sibony, professeur à HEC et à Oxford". France Inter (in French). 2025-05-10. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
- ^ Brill, Steven (2021-05-18). "For a Fairer World, It's Necessary First to Cut Through the 'Noise'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ "" Experts, décideurs ou simples observateurs, nous sommes tous affectés par des biais cognitifs "". Le Monde.fr (in French). 2020-04-25. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
- ^ "Comment avons-nous pu nous aveugler à ce point ?". Philonomist (in French). 2020-03-19. Retrieved 2023-02-25.