Decision Making
Decision Making
Decision Making
Decision-Making
Chapter 11
Learning Objectives
A problem for which the existing and desired states are unclear
and the method of getting to the desired state is unknown.
They are unique and unusual problems that have not been
encountered before.
They tend to be complex and involve a high degree of
uncertainty.
They frequently arouse controversy and conflict.
Ill-Structured Problems
BUT those assumptions don’t apply to many work situations…
Should we go global?
How can we
improve our
market share?
Should I change
my career?
Should we expand
our product
line?
Ill-structured problems Cont’d
Economic Person:
Can gather information without cost and is completely
informed.
Is perfectly logical.
Has only one criterion for decision making: economic gain.
These perfectly rational characteristics do not exist in real
decision makers.
Bounded Rationality
Herbert Simon recognized that the rational characteristics of
Economic Person do not exist in real decision makers.
He suggested that managers use bounded rationality rather than
perfect rationality.
Bounded rationality is a decision strategy that relies on limited
information and that reflects time constraints and political
considerations that act as bounds to rationality.
Bounded Rationality Model:
How we really make decisions…
Because of Bounded
Rationality we cannot always
process everything that we
ideally need in order to make
an optimal decision.
Given our bounded rationality, we often rely on judgement
shortcuts that can distort the decision process…
Sources of influence on our decision process
If you do not enjoy the university program you are in, you have 2
choices:
Dissonance reduction.
Social norm for consistent behaviour.
Motivation to not appear wasteful.
The way the problem is framed.
Personality, moods, and emotions.
And the sunk cost effect!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMBWMdP0-tg
Preventing Escalation of Commitment
Be alert for excessive optimism or extremely positive media
attention early in a project cycle.
Encourage continuous experimentation with reframing the
problem. Shift the frame to saving rather than spending.
Set specific goals for the project in advance that must be met if
more resources are to be invested.
Prevention cont’d
Place more emphasis on evaluating managers on how they made
decisions and less on decision outcomes.
Separate initial and subsequent decision making so that
individuals who make the initial decision to embark on a course
of action are assisted or replaced by others who decide if a
course of action should be continued.
Leadership changes can sometimes break a spiral of escalation.
Example:
Dove ad was the product of a marketing
decision making team:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vL4b-Il3EnE
Groupthink Symptoms
Illusion of invulnerability
Rationalization
Illusion of morality
Stereotypes of outsiders
Pressure for conformity
Self-censorship
Illusion of unanimity
Mindguards
Illusion of Invulnerability