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Decreased uncertainty, improved decisions

Global Advisors is a leader in defining quantified strategies, decreasing uncertainty, improving decisions and achieving measureable results.

We specialise in providing highly-analytical data-driven recommendations in the face of significant uncertainty.

We utilise advanced predictive analytics to build robust strategies and enable our clients to make calculated decisions.

We support implementation of adaptive capability and capacity.

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Thoughts

Global Advisors’ Thoughts: Leading a deliberate life

Global Advisors’ Thoughts: Leading a deliberate life

By Marc Wilson
Marc is a partner at Global Advisors and based in Johannesburg, South Africa

Download this article at https://globaladvisors.biz/blog/2018/06/26/leading-a-deliberate-life/.

Picket fences. Family of four. Management position.

Mid-life crisis. Meaning. Purpose.

Someone once said that, “At 18, I had all the answers. At 35, I realised I didn’t know the question.”

Serendipity has a lot going for it. Many people might sail through life taking what comes and enjoying the moment. Others might be open to chance and have nothing go right for them.

Some people might strive to achieve, realise rare successes and be bitterly unhappy. Others might be driven and enjoy incredible success and fulfilment.

Perhaps the majority of us become beholden to the momentum of our lives.

We might study, start a career, marry, buy a dream house, have children, send them to a top school. Those steps make up components of many of our dreams. They are steps that may define each subsequent choice. As I discussed this with a friend recently, he remarked that few of these steps had been subject of deliberations in his life – increasingly these steps were the outcome of momentum. Each will shape every step he takes for the rest of his life. He would not have things any other way, but if he knew what he knows now, he might have been more deliberate about choice and consequence…..

Read more at https://globaladvisors.biz/blog/2018/06/26/leading-a-deliberate-life/

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Strategy Tools

Strategy tools: Effective transfer pricing

Strategy tools: Effective transfer pricing

So much has been written about transfer pricing. Yet it remains a bone of contention in almost every organisation. Transfer pricing is not merely a rational challenge – it often raises the emotions of internal service users and providers who argue regarding scope, quality, price and value.

We have found that effective transfer pricing relies on some fairly simple best practices and critical success factors.

Many organisations recover costs as a regular ‘below-the-line’ deduction from operating division income statements. In our experience, charge out is almost always preferable. This results in internal value judgements and negotiation regarding delivery happening closer to time of use.

Internal prices / cost recovery plays a crucial role within an organisation: it ‘price signals’ to the buyer and the supplier of the service. Buyers make economic use decisions and suppliers make resource and capacity decisions. This fundamental function and consequence governs the optimal implementation of internal pricing / cost recovery.

We have typically seen that the realisation that internal pricing plays this role and the consequences of poor implementation are not well understood.

Results of poor transfer pricing implementation

Sub-optimal economic use decisions

Where costs / prices are higher than they should be, buyers pass this on as an inflated cost to their customers, experience margin squeeze, or utilise less of the service than they might have.
Strategically this can lead to incorrect decisions regarding the provision of services to the market and loss of market share.
Where costs / prices are lower than they should be, this can lead to overuse of a product or service and poor cost recovery from external customers.
Strategically this can result in the over promotion and sales of products and services that are achieving lower margins than thought, or that might even be making losses.

Sub-optimal investment and resourcing decisions

Incorrect pricing can lead to over- or under-investment in capacity and product or service quality. Further, the resourcing decisions will be incorrect should the price signal to the supplier be incorrect.

Political and emotional argument

Where buyers are unable to obtain assurance that an internal price is correct, there is typically resentment regarding the cost of the internal product and service and the sheltered position employees of the internal service provider occupy – in the buyer’s eyes free from commercial pressures.
Buyers and suppliers typically also argue regarding the quality of the service or product relative to the price paid.
Suppliers may react to criticism claiming their product or service is strategic in nature and refute its availability in the external markets.

Poor product / service quality

Poor price signals will result in lack of comparable product and service quality benchmarks. This can result in ‘gold-plating’ or poor-quality product and service provision.

Read more at https://globaladvisors.biz/2021/01/06/strategy-tools-effective-transfer-pricing/

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Fast Facts

Selected News

Term: Steelman argument

Term: Steelman argument

“A steelman argument is a dialectical technique where you restate an opponent’s position in its strongest, most charitable, and most convincing form, even better than they presented it, before you offer your counterargument, aiming to understand the truth and engage.” – Steelman argument

The purpose is not to score rhetorical points, but to understand the underlying truth of the issue, test your own beliefs, and engage respectfully and productively with those who disagree.

In a steelman argument, a participant in a discussion:

  • Listens carefully to the other side’s position, reasons, evidence, and concerns.
  • Reconstructs that position as logically, factually, and rhetorically strong as possible, eliminating obvious errors, clarifying ambiguities, and adding reasonable supporting considerations.
  • Checks this reconstruction with the opponent to ensure it is both accurate and recognisable – ideally something they would endorse or even prefer to their original wording.
  • Only then advances their own critique, counterarguments, or alternative proposals, addressing this improved version rather than a weaker one.

This makes steelmanning the conceptual opposite of the straw man fallacy, where a position is caricatured or simplified to make it easier to attack. Where a straw man trades on distortion to make disagreement easier, a steelman trades on fairness and intellectual generosity to make understanding deeper.

Core principles of steelmanning

Four principles underpin effective steelman arguments:

  • Charity – You interpret your counterpart’s words in the most reasonable light, attributing to them the most coherent and defensible version of their view, rather than assuming confusion, bad faith, or ignorance.
  • Accuracy – You preserve the core commitments, values, and intended meaning of their position; you do not quietly change what is at stake, even while you improve its structure and support.
  • Strengthening – You explicitly look for the best reasons, analogies, and evidence that could support their view, including arguments they have not yet articulated but would plausibly accept.
  • Verification – You invite your interlocutor to confirm or refine your restatement, aiming for the moment when they can honestly say, “Yes, that is what I mean – and that is an even better version of my view than I initially gave.”

Steelman vs. straw man vs. related techniques

Concept What it does Typical intention
Steelman argument Strengthens and clarifies the opposing view before critiquing it. Seek truth, understand deeply, and persuade through fairness.
Straw man fallacy Misrepresents or oversimplifies a view to make it easier to refute. Win a debate, create rhetorical advantage, or avoid hard questions.
Devil’s advocate Adopts a contrary position (not necessarily sincerely held) to expose weaknesses or overlooked risks. Stress-test prevailing assumptions, foster critical thinking.
Thought experiment / counterfactual Explores hypothetical scenarios to test principles or intuitions. Clarify implications, reveal hidden assumptions, probe edge cases.

Steelman arguments often incorporate elements of counterfactuals and thought experiments. For example, to strengthen a policy criticism, you might ask: “Suppose this policy were applied in a more extreme case – would the same concerns still hold?” You then build the best version of the concern across such scenarios before responding.

Why steelmanning matters in strategy and decision-making

In strategic analysis, investing, policy design, and complex organisational decisions, steelman arguments help to:

  • Reduce confirmation bias by forcing you to internalise the strongest objections to your preferred view.
  • Improve risk management by properly articulating downside scenarios and adverse stakeholder perspectives before discarding them.
  • Enhance credibility with boards, clients, and teams, who see that arguments have been tested against serious, not superficial, opposition.
  • Strengthen strategy by making sure that chosen options have survived comparison with the most powerful alternatives, not just weakly framed ones.

When used rigorously, the steelman discipline often turns a confrontational debate into a form of collaborative problem-solving, where each side helps the other refine their views and the final outcome is more robust than either starting position.

Practical steps to construct a steelman argument

A practical steelmanning process in a meeting, negotiation, or analytical setting might look like this:

  • 1. Elicit and clarify
    Ask the other party to explain their view fully. Use probing but neutral questions: “What is the central concern?”, “What outcomes are you trying to avoid?”, “What evidence most strongly supports your view?”
  • 2. Map and organise
    Identify their main claims, supporting reasons, implicit assumptions, and key examples. Group these into a coherent structure, ranking the arguments from strongest to weakest.
  • 3. Strengthen
    Add reasonable premises they may have missed, improve their examples, and fill gaps with the best available data or analogies that genuinely support their position.
  • 4. Restate back
    Present your reconstructed version, starting with a phrase such as, “Let me try to state your view as strongly as I can.” Invite correction until they endorse it.
  • 5. Engage and test
    Only once agreement on the steelman is reached do you introduce counterarguments, alternative hypotheses, or different scenarios – always addressing the strong version rather than retreating to weaker caricatures.

Best related strategy theorist: John Stuart Mill

Although the term “steelman” is modern, the deepest intellectual justification for the practice in strategy, policy, and public reasoning comes from the nineteenth-century philosopher and political economist John Stuart Mill. His work provides a powerful conceptual foundation for steelmanning, especially in high-stakes decision contexts.

Mill’s connection to steelmanning

Mill argued that you cannot truly know your own position unless you also understand, in its most persuasive form, the best arguments for the opposing side. He insisted that anyone who only hears or articulates one side of a case holds their opinion as a “prejudice” rather than a reasoned view. In modern terms, he is effectively demanding that responsible thinkers and decision-makers steelman their opponents before settling on a conclusion.

In his work on liberty, representative government, and political economy, Mill repeatedly:

  • Reconstructed opposing positions in detail, often giving them more systematic support than their own advocates had provided.
  • Explored counterfactual scenarios and hypotheticals to see where each argument would succeed or fail.
  • Treated thoughtful critics as partners in the search for truth rather than as enemies to be defeated.

This method aligns closely with the steelman ethos in modern strategy work: before committing to a policy, investment, or organisational move, you owe it to yourself and your stakeholders to understand the most credible case against your intended path – not a caricature of it.

Biography and intellectual context

John Stuart Mill (1806 – 1873) was an English philosopher, economist, and civil servant, widely regarded as one of the most influential thinkers in the liberal tradition. Educated intensively from a very young age by his father, James Mill, under the influence of Jeremy Bentham, he mastered classical languages, logic, and political economy in his childhood, but suffered a mental crisis in his early twenties that led him to broaden his outlook beyond strict utilitarianism.

Mill’s major works include:

  • System of Logic, where he analysed how we form and test hypotheses, including the role of competing explanations.
  • On Liberty, which defended freedom of thought, speech, and experimentation in ways that presuppose an active culture of hearing and strengthening opposing views.
  • Principles of Political Economy, a major text that carefully considers economic arguments from multiple sides before reaching policy conclusions.

As a senior official in the East India Company and later a Member of Parliament, Mill moved between theory and practice, applying his analytical methods to real-world questions of governance, representation, and reform. His insistence that truth and sound policy emerge only from confronting the strongest counter-arguments is a direct ancestor of the modern steelman method in strategic reasoning, board-level debate, and public policy design.

Mill’s legacy for modern strategic steelmanning

For contemporary strategists, investors, and leaders, Mill’s legacy can be summarised as a disciplined demand: before acting, ensure that you could state the best good-faith case against your intention more clearly and powerfully than its own advocates. Only then is your subsequent decision genuinely informed rather than insulated by bias.

In this way, John Stuart Mill stands as the key historical theorist behind the steelman argument – not for coining the term, but for articulating the intellectual and ethical duty to engage with opponents at their strongest, in pursuit of truth and resilient strategy.

References

1. https://aliabdaal.com/newsletter/the-steelman-argument/

2. https://themindcollection.com/steelmanning-how-to-discover-the-truth-by-helping-your-opponent/

3. https://ratiochristi.org/the-anatomy-of-persuasion-the-steel-man/

4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veeGKTzbYjc

5. https://simplicable.com/en/steel-man

6. https://umbrex.com/resources/tools-for-thinking/what-is-steelmanning/

"A steelman argument is a dialectical technique where you restate an opponent's position in its strongest, most charitable, and most convincing form, even better than they presented it, before you offer your counterargument, aiming to understand the truth and engage." - Term: Steelman argument

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