Title: MAKING SMART CHOICES
1MAKING SMART CHOICES
- How to think about your whole decision problem
John S. Hammond, Ralph L. Keeney, Howard Raiffa
(1999), Smart Choices, Harvard Business School
Press
2Eight keys to effective decision making
- Work on the right decision problem
- Specify your objectives
- Create imaginative alternatives
- Understand the consequences
- Grapple with your tradeoffs
- Clarify your uncertainties
- Think hard about your risk tolerance
- Consider linked decisions
3PROBLEM How to define your decision problem to
solve the right problem
- Be creative about your problem definition
- Turn problems into opportunities
- Define the decision problem
- What triggered this decision? Why am I
considering it? - Question the constraints the problem statement.
- Understand what other decisions impinge or hinge
on this decision. - Establish a workable scope for your problem
definition. - Ask others how they see the see the situation
for fresh insights. - Reexamine problem definition as you proceed
- Maintain your perspective
4OBJECTIVES How to clarify what you are really
trying to achieve with your decision
- Let your objectives be your guide
- Watch out for pitfalls narrow focus
insufficient time spent - Master the art of identifying objectives
- Write down all concerns you want to address
- Convert concerns into succinct objectives
- Separate ends from means to establish fundamental
objectives Why? Why? Why? Why? Why? - Clarify what you mean by each objective
- Test objectives to see if they capture your
interests
5OBJECTIVES How to clarify what you are really
trying to achieve with your decision (continued)
- Practical advice for nailing down objectives
- Objectives are personal
- Different objectives suit different problems
- Objectives should not be limited to availability
or ease of use of data - Fundamental objectives for similar problems
should remain relatively stable over time
6ALTERNATIVES How to make smarter choices by
creating better alternatives
- Dont box yourself in with limited alternatives
- The keys to generating between alternatives
- Use objectives ask how?
- Challenge constraints
- Set high aspirations
- Do your own thinking first
- Learn from experience
- Ask others for suggestions
- Give your subconscious time to operate
- Create alternatives first evaluate them later
- Never stop looking for alternatives
7ALTERNATIVES How to make smarter choices by
creating better alternatives (continued)
- Tailor your alternatives to your problem
- Process alternatives Ben Franklin Example
- Win-win alternatives
- Information gathering alternatives
- Time-buying alternatives
- Know when to quit looking
8CONSEQUENCES How to describe how well each
alternative meets your objectives
- Describe consequences with appropriate accuracy
- Completeness and precision
- Build a consequences table
- Mentally put yourself in the future
- Create a free-form description of each
alternatives consequences - Eliminate any clearly inferior alternatives
- Organize descriptions of remaining alternatives
into a consequences table - Compare alternatives using a consequences table
9CONSEQUENCES TABLE --
10CONSEQUENCES How to describe how well each
alternative meets your objectives (continued)
- Master the art of describing consequences
- Try before you buy
- Use common scales to describe
- Dont rely on hard data
- Make the most of available information
- Use experts wisely
- Choose sales that reflect an appropriate level of
precision - Address major uncertainty head on
11TRADEOFFS How to make tough compromises when you
cant achieve all of your objectives
- Find and eliminate dominated alternatives
- Make tradeoffs using even-swaps -- the even swap
method - Determine the change necessary to cancel our an
objective - Assess what change in another objective would
compensate for the needed change - Make the even swap
- Cancel out the now irrelevant objective
- Eliminate the dominated alternative
12EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE --
13EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE --
Alt A dominates Alt E
14EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE --
Alt D practically dominates Alt C swap salary
increase to 2000 w/ drop in working condition
from Excellent to Good
15EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE --
Now D dominates C
And D also dominates B
16EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE
- For Alternative A do the following even swaps
- Working conditions form Poor to Good Salary from
2500 to 2400
17EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE
- For Alternative A do the following even swaps
- Experience from Great to Good Travel Time from
45 to 30
18EVEN SWAP EXAMPLE
- For Alternative A do the following even swaps
- Salary from 2400 to 2000 Free time from Little
to Flexible
Now D dominates A so select D!
19TRADEOFFS How to make tough compromises when you
cant achieve all of your objectives (continued)
- Practical dominance
- one alternative dominates another except for a
minor difference e.g. 25 salary - Practical advice for making even swaps
- Make the easier swaps first
- Concentrate on the amount of the swap not on
the perceived importance of the objective - Value an incremental change based on what you
start with - Make consistent swaps
- Seek out information to make informed swaps
20UNCERTAINTY How to think about and act on
uncertainties affecting your decision
- Distinguish smart choices from good consequences
- A smart choice, a bad consequence
- A poor choice, a good consequence
- Use risk profiles to simplify decisions involving
uncertainty - How to construct a risk profile
- Identify key uncertainties
- Define outcomes
- Assign changes
- Use judgment consult existing information
collect new data ask experts break
uncertainties into their components - Clarify the consequences
- Picture risk profiles with decision trees
21RISK TOLERANCE How to account for your appetite
for risk
- Understand your willingness to take risks
- Incorporate your risk tolerance into your
decisions - Quantify risk tolerance with desirability scoring
- Desirability means utility
- Assign desirability scores to all consequences
- Calculate each consequences contribution to the
overall desirability of the alternative - Calculate each alternative's overall desirability
score - Compare and choose
22RISK TOLERANCE How to account for your appetite
for risk (continued)
- Avoid pitfalls
- Over focus on the negative
- Fudging probabilities to account for risk
- Ignoring significant uncertainty
- Foolish optimism
- Avoiding risky decisions because they are complex
- Subordinates who do not reflect your
organizations risk tolerance in their decisions - Open up new opportunities for managing risk
- Share the risk
- Seek risk reducing information
- Diversify the risk
- Hedge the risk
- Insure against the risk
23LINKED DECISIONS How to plan ahead by
effectively coordinating current and future
decisions
- Linked decisions are complex
- Make smart linked decisions by planning ahead
- Follow six steps to analyze linked decisions
- Understand the basic decision problem
- Identify ways to reduce critical uncertainties
- Identify future decisions linked to the basic
decision - Understand the relationships in linked decisions
- Decide on what to do in the basic decision
- Treat later decisions as new decision problems
- Keep all your options open with flexible plans
- All-weather plans
- Short-cycle plans
- Option wideners
- Be prepared plans
24PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAPS How to avoid some of the
tricks your mind can play on you when you are
deciding
- Neglecting relevant information the anchoring
trap - Population of Turkey example (35MM vs 100MM
anchor) - The status quo trap
- Chocolate bar vs. mug gift example
- Sunk cost trap
- Car repair example after accident
- Seeing what you want to see the confirming
evidence trap
25PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAPS How to avoid some of the
tricks your mind can play on you when you are
deciding
- Posing the wrong question the framing trap
- Framing gains vs losses
- 3 ships _at_ 200M per ship example
- Risk averse re gains risk seeking re losses
- Slanting probabilities and estimates the
prudence trap - Seeing patterns where none exist the outguessing
randomness trap - Going mystical about incidences the
surprised-by-surprises trap