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Managerial Decision Making

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Title: Managerial Decision Making


1
Managerial Decision Making
2
Learning Objectives
  • After studying the chapter, you should be able
    to
  • Differentiate between programmed and
    non-programmed decisions, and explain why
    non-programmed decision making is a complex,
    uncertain process.
  • Describe the six steps that managers should take
    to make the best decisions.
  • Explain how cognitive biases can lead managers to
    make poor decisions.

3
The Nature of Managerial Decision Making
  • Decision Making
  • The process by which managers respond to
    opportunities and threats that confront them by
    analyzing options and making determinations about
    specific organizational goals and courses of
    action.

4
The Nature of Managerial Decision Making
  • Decisions in response to opportunities
  • occurs when managers respond to ways to improve
    organizational performance to benefit customers,
    employees, and other stakeholder groups
  • Decisions in response to threats
  • events inside or outside the organization are
    adversely affecting organizational performance

5
Decision Making
  • Programmed Decision
  • Routine, certain and fairly structured decisions
  • Virtually automatic decision making that follows
    established rules or guidelines.
  • Managers have made the same decision many times
    before
  • Little ambiguity involved

6
Decision Making
  • Non-Programmed Decisions
  • Non routine decision made in response to unusual
    or novel opportunities and threats.
  • The are no rules to follow since the decision is
    new.
  • Decisions are made based on information, and a
    managers intuition, and judgment.

7
Decision Making
  • Intuition
  • feelings, beliefs, and hunches that come readily
    to mind, require little effort and information
    gathering and result in on-the-spot decisions

8
Decision Making
  • Reasoned judgment
  • decisions that take time and effort to make and
    result from careful information gathering,
    generation of alternatives, and evaluation of
    alternatives

9
  • MODELS FOR DECISION-MAKING

10
The Classical Model
  • Classical Model of Decision Making
  • A prescriptive model of decision making that
    assumes the decision maker can identify and
    evaluate all possible alternatives and their
    consequences and rationally choose the most
    appropriate course of action.
  • Optimum decision
  • The most appropriate decision in light of what
    managers believe to be the most desirable future
    consequences for their organization.

11
The Classical Model of Decision Making
Figure 7.1
12
The Administrative Model
  • Administrative Model of Decision Making
  • An approach to decision making that explains why
    decision making is inherently uncertain and risky
    and why managers can rarely make decisions in the
    manner prescribed by the classical model.
  • This model is based on three important concepts
    bounded rationality, incomplete information, and
    satisficing.

13
The Administrative Model
  • Administrative Model of Decision Making
  • Bounded rationality
  • A large number of alternatives and available
    information can be so extensive that managers
    cannot consider it all.
  • Decisions are limited by peoples cognitive
    limitations.
  • Incomplete information
  • Because of risk and uncertainty, ambiguity, and
    time constraints

14
Why Information Is Incomplete
Figure 7.2
15
Causes of Incomplete Information
  • Risk
  • Present when managers know the possible outcomes
    of a particular course of action and can assign
    probabilities to them.
  • Uncertainty
  • Probabilities cannot be given for outcomes and
    the future is unknown.

16
Causes of Incomplete Information
Young Woman or Old Woman
  • Ambiguous Information
  • Information whose meaning is not clear allowing
    it to be interpreted in multiple or conflicting
    ways.

Figure 7.3
17
Causes of Incomplete Information
  • Time constraints and information costs
  • managers have neither the time nor money to
    search for all possible alternatives and evaluate
    potential consequences

18
Causes of Incomplete Information
  • Satisficing
  • Searching for and choosing an acceptable, or
    satisfactory response to problems and
    opportunities, rather than trying to make the
    best decision.

19
Causes of Incomplete Information
  • Managers explore a limited number of options and
    choose an acceptable decision rather than the
    optimum decision.
  • This is the typical response of managers when
    dealing with incomplete information.

20
Six Steps in Decision Making
21
Decision Making Steps
  • Step 1. Recognize Need for a Decision or
    Awareness of a problem
  • Sparked by an event such as environment changes.
  • Managers must first realize that a decision must
    be made.
  • Step 2. Generate Alternatives
  • Managers must develop feasible alternative
    courses of action.
  • If good alternatives are missed, the resulting
    decision is poor.
  • It is hard to develop creative alternatives, so
    managers need to look for new ideas.

22
Decision Making Steps
  • Step 3. Evaluate Alternatives
  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of each
    alternative?
  • Managers should specify criteria, then evaluate.

23
Decision Making Steps
Step 3. Evaluate alternatives
24
General Criteria for Evaluating Possible Courses
of Action
Figure 7.5
25
Decision Making Steps
  • Step 4. Choose Among Alternatives
  • Rank the various alternatives and make a decision
  • Managers must be sure all the information
    available is brought to bear on the problem or
    issue at hand

26
Decision Making Steps
  • Step 5. Implement Chosen Alternative
  • Managers must now carry out the alternative.
  • Often a decision is made and not implemented.
  • Step 6. Learn From Feedback
  • Managers should consider what went right and
    wrong with the decision and learn for the future.
  • Without feedback, managers do not learn from
    experience and will repeat the same mistake over.

27
Feedback Procedure
  1. Compare what actually happened to what was
    expected to happen as a result of the decision
  2. Explore why any expectations for the decision
    were not met
  3. Derive guidelines that will help in future
    decision making

28
Cognitive Biases and Decision Making
  • Heuristics
  • Rules of thumb that simplify the process of
    making decisions.
  • Decision makers use heuristics to deal with
    bounded rationality.
  • If the heuristic is wrong, however, then poor
    decisions result from its use.
  • Systematic errors errors that people make over
    and over and that result in poor decision making

29
Sources of Cognitive Bias at the Individual and
Group Levels
Figure 7.6
30
Types of Cognitive Biases
  • Prior Hypothesis Bias
  • Allowing strong prior beliefs about a
    relationship between variables to influence
    decisions based on these beliefs even when
    evidence shows they are wrong.
  • Representativeness
  • The decision maker incorrectly generalizes a
    decision from a small sample or a single incident.

31
Types of Cognitive Biases
  • Illusion of Control
  • The tendency to overestimates ones own ability
    to control activities and events.
  • Escalating Commitment
  • Committing considerable resources to project and
    then committing more even if evidence shows the
    project is failing.

32
Group Decision Making
  • Superior to individual making
  • Choices less likely to fall victim to bias
  • Able to draw on combined skills of group members
  • Improve ability to generate feasible alternatives

33
Group Decision Making
  • Allows managers to process more information
  • Managers affected by decisions agree to cooperate

34
Methods for Group Decision - making
  • Nominal Technique
  • Delphi Technique

35
1. Nominal Group Technique
  • The nominal group technique (NGT) is a decision
    making method for use among groups of many sizes,
    who want to make their decision quickly, as by a
    vote, but want everyone's opinions taken into
    account
  • The nominal technique restricts discussion or
    interpersonal communication during the
    decision-making process, and hence, the term
    nominal.

36
Process for Nominal Group Technique
  • When any problem is presented and then the
    following steps are taken by group members
  • Members meet as a group. But before any
    discussion takes place, each member independently
    writes down his or her ideas on the problem.
  • After this silent period, each member presents
    one idea to the group. Each member takes his or
    her turn, presenting a single idea until all
    ideas have been presented and recorded. No
    discussion takes place until all ideas have been
    recorded.

37
Continue.
  • The group now discusses the ideas for clarity and
    evaluates them.
  • Each group member silently and independently
    rank-orders the ideas. The ideas with the highest
    aggregate ranking determine the final decision.

38
2. Delphi Technique
  • The Delphi method is a systematic, interactive
    forecasting method which relies on a panel of
    experts.
  • The experts answer questionnaires in two or more
    rounds. After each round, a facilitator provides
    an anonymous summary of the experts forecasts
    from the previous round as well as the reasons
    they provided for their judgments.

39
  • Thus, experts are encouraged to revise their
    earlier answers in light of the replies of other
    members of their panel.
  • It is believed that during this process the range
    of the answers will decrease and the group will
    converge towards the "correct" answer.

40
2. Delphi Technique
  • Written approach to creative problem solving.
  • Group leader writes a statement of the problem to
    which managers respond
  • Questionnaire is sent to managers to generate
    solutions
  • Team of managers summarizes the responses and
    results are sent back to the participants
  • Process is repeated until a consensus is reached

41
Group Decision Making
  • Potential Disadvantages
  • Can take much longer than individuals to make
    decisions
  • Can be difficult to get two or more managers to
    agree because of different interests and
    preferences
  • Can be undermined by biases

42
References
  • Gareth R. Jones. Contemporary Management, Tata
    McGraw hill publication.
  • Stephen Robbins. Organizational Behaviour.
    Pearson Education India.
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