Title: Problem Solving / Decision Making
1Problem Solving /Decision Making
- Kepner-Tregoe
- The New Rational Manager
- Chapter 4
2Chapter 4 Contents
- Conditions Skills of Making Choices
- Major Elements of Decision Analysis
- The Techniques of Decision Analysis (DA)
3People and Decisions
- Almost universally, people will tell you they
want to be included in making decisions that
impact them - But, many shun the task of making a decision
- Controversy
- Lack of unbiased procedure
- Power play vs non-confrontational
4People and Decisions
- When people are provided a common approach they
find they can work well in teams and arrive at
mutually acceptable decisions - more sharing of information
- differences are effectively reconciled
- decision making is less biased
5Decision Analysis
- Decision Analysis (DA) is a systematic procedure
based on the thinking pattern we use when making
reasoned choices. - Recognize a choice must be made
- Consider specific factors to be satisfied
- Decide on an action
- Consider the risks
6DA Thinking Pattern
- These four elements of the decision making
thinking pattern play a roll in every decision we
make. - For simple and repetitive decision we may not
even be conscious of this process because memory
and experience play such an important roll. - Contrast when you were first learning to drive
with your driving decisions today.
7DA and Information
- For complex decisions, there are a myriad of
details behind every decision. - But the information available may not match the
need - not enough information
- poor quality information
- too much information
- questions of relevancy accuracy
8K-Ts Decision Making Procedure
- What we need is a systematic procedure that will
do the following - blend experience and judgement
- with the best, most relevant information
available - to produce good decisions.
9K-Ts Decision Analysis
- The purpose of K-Ts DA is to
- identify what needs to be done,
- develop the specific criteria for its
accomplishment, - evaluate the available alternatives relative to
the criteria - identify the risks involved.
10Major Elements of DAThe Decision Statement
- The decision statement is the identification of
the choice dilemma to be resolved. - Provides focus
- sets limits
- Wording deserves careful attention
- implies level of decision
- implies prior decisions
11Major Elements of DAThe Objectives of the
Decision
- Objectives are the criteria for the decision.
- Identification of MUSTs and WANTs
- the specific results and benefits to be achieved
- This approach is the antithesis of identifying a
course of action and then building a case to
support it.
12Major Elements of DAMUST Objectives
- MUSTs are mandatory
- They must be achieved by a successful decision
- MUSTs may not be the most important objectives
- MUSTs must be measurable
- MUSTs operate as a screen for decision
alternatives
13Major Elements of DAWANT Objectives
- All other objectives are WANTs
- They are used to evaluate relative performance
among the alternatives - WANTs create a comparative picture
- MUSTs decide who plays WANTs decide who wins
- The same objective (slightly reworded) may be
both a MUST and a WANT
14Major Elements of DAAlternatives
- An ideal alternative (1) satisfies the MUSTs (2)
is the best relative performer against every
WANT (3) doesnt add new difficulties. - Ideal alternatives are rare so seeking a balanced
choice among the alternatives is common.
15Major Elements of DAAlternatives
- Choices among alternatives may take the form of
- Choosing between several alternatives,
- Deciding whether a single alternative is good
enough to accept, - Choosing between a current and proposed method.
16Major Elements of DAIdentification of Risks
- The final step in DA is to search for possible
adverse consequences of all feasible
alternatives. - Before the final choice is made
- Judgement, experience, and intuition are
critically important here.
17The Techniques of Decision Analysis
- State the Decision
- Develop Objectives
- Classify objectives into MUSTs and WANTs
- Weigh the WANTs
- Generate Alternatives
18The Techniques of Decision Analysis
- Screen alternatives with the MUSTs
- Compare alternatives against the WANTs
- Identify adverse consequences
- Make the best balanced choice
19Techniques of DADecision Stmt and Objectives
- State the decision
- review case discussion (W 86-87, B 90-91)
- Develop and classify objectives
- MUSTs are measurable GO/NO GO
- WANTs are additional desirables
- see case discussion (W 87, B 91-92)
20Techniques of DAWeighting
- Weigh the objectives
- most important one(s) get a 10 all others get
weights between 1 and 10 - Danger signals
- too many high or low numbers
- too many reflecting a single viewpoint
- Review the case discussion (W 88, B 92-93)
21Techniques of DAGenerate MUSTs
- Generate alternatives
- Generate, Generate, Generate!
- Do Not Evaluate -- yet!
- Once generated, compare the alternatives to the
MUSTs - Retain if GO on all MUSTs
- Drop if NO GO on any MUST
- See case example (W F7 90-91, B F6 94-95)
22Techniques of DAWANTs
- Compare against the WANTs
- Alternative that best satisfies the WANT gets a
10 - Others are scored relative to this alternative .
- This scoring is based on selecting the best
alternative not on determining closeness to an
ideal.
23Techniques of DAWANTs
- If none of the alternatives deserve a 10 comes
up repeatedly, consider - are the objectives realistic?
- do we need to generate more alternatives?
- Alternatively, if all alternatives score very
high on all objectives, consider - do the objectives need to be more demanding?
24Techniques of DAWeighted Scores
- See case example ( W F8 92-93, B F7 96-97)
- Next compute the weighted score for each
alternative under each WANT - multiply objective weight by alternative score
- Total the weighted scores for an alternatives
total weighted score.
25Techniques of DATentative Choice
- See case example (W F9 94-95 , B F8 98-99)
- The highest total weighted score becomes the
tentative choice. - This choice is not the best balanced choice yet
since risks have not been considered.
26Techniques of DAWhy Evaluate Risks
- Identifying risks is often skipped. Why?
- A clear winner as a tentative choice
- Attitude of pessimism
- Dont want to revisit painful lessons from the
past - To make the analysis objective and rigorous, we
must evaluate risks!
27Techniques of DAQuestions to Evaluate Risks
- Considering adverse consequences
- What are the implications of being close to a
MUST limit? - What information might be invalid? What are the
implications? - What could go wrong in the short-term? Long-term?
- What might keep this alternative from being
successful?
28Techniques of DAEvaluating Risks
- Evaluating adverse consequences
- alternatives are evaluated separately, not in
comparison to one another. - State the consequence
- Rate its probability
- Rate its seriousness
- See Case example (W 97, B 101)
29Techniques of DABest Balanced Choice
- Start with the Tentative Choice Alternative
- Ask are we willing to accept the risks of this
choice to gain the benefits? - If yes, select as the best balanced choice
- If no, move to the next highest weighted score
and re-ask the question. - See case discussion (W 98, B 101-102)
30Decision Analysis Summary
- DA does not guarantee a perfect decision every
time. - DA provides for the productive use of all
available information judgements. - DA enables a manager to reduce the incidence of
poor decision making by providing a systematic
framework for evaluating alternatives.