Managerial decision making

Содержание

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L E A R N I N G O U T L

6– L E A R N I N G O U T
I N E

The Decision-Making Process
Define decision and decision-making process.
Describe the eight steps in the decision-making process.
The Manager as Decision Maker
Discuss the assumptions of rational decision making.
Describe the concepts of bounded rationality, satisficing, and escalation of commitment.
Explain intuitive decision making.
Contrast programmed and nonprogrammed decisions.

Managerial Decision Making

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L E A R N I N G O U T L

6– L E A R N I N G O U T
I N E (cont’d)

The Manager as Decision Maker (cont’d)
Contrast the three decision-making conditions.
Explain maximax, maximin, and minimax decision choice approaches.
Describe the four decision making styles.
Discuss the twelve decision-making biases managers may exhibit.
Describe how manager can deal with the negative effects of decision errors and biases.
Explain the managerial decision-making model.

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L E A R N I N G O U T L

6– L E A R N I N G O U T
I N E (cont’d)

Decision Making for Today’s World
Explain how managers can make effective decisions in today’s world.
List six characteristics of an effective decision-making process.
Describe the five habits of highly reliable organizations.

Managerial Decision Making

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Decisions and Decision Making

Decision = choice made from available alternatives
Decision Making =

Decisions and Decision Making Decision = choice made from available alternatives Decision
process of identifying problems and opportunities and resolving them

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Decision Making

The Decision-Making Process
Identifying a problem and decision criteria and allocating weights

6– Decision Making The Decision-Making Process Identifying a problem and decision criteria
to the criteria.
Developing, analyzing, and selecting an alternative that can resolve the problem.
Implementing the selected alternative.
Evaluating the decision’s effectiveness.

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Exhibit 6–1 The Decision-Making Process

6– Exhibit 6–1 The Decision-Making Process

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Step 1: Identifying the Problem

Problem
A discrepancy between an existing and desired state

6– Step 1: Identifying the Problem Problem A discrepancy between an existing
of affairs.
Characteristics of Problems
A problem becomes a problem when a manager becomes aware of it.
There is pressure to solve the problem.
The manager must have the authority, information, or resources needed to solve the problem.

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Step 2: Identifying Decision Criteria

Decision criteria are factors that are important (relevant)

6– Step 2: Identifying Decision Criteria Decision criteria are factors that are
to resolving the problem.
Costs that will be incurred (investments required)
Risks likely to be encountered (chance of failure)
Outcomes that are desired (growth of the firm)

Step 3: Allocating Weights to the Criteria

Decision criteria are not of equal importance:
Assigning a weight to each item places the items in the correct priority order of their importance in the decision making process.

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Exhibit 6–2 Criteria and Weights for Computer Replacement Decision

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–2 Criteria and Weights for Computer Replacement Decision Managerial Decision Making

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Step 4: Developing Alternatives

Identifying viable alternatives
Alternatives are listed (without evaluation) that can

6– Step 4: Developing Alternatives Identifying viable alternatives Alternatives are listed (without
resolve the problem.

Step 5: Analyzing Alternatives

Appraising each alternative’s strengths and weaknesses
An alternative’s appraisal is based on its ability to resolve the issues identified in steps 2 and 3.

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Exhibit 6–3 Assessed Values of Laptop Computers Using Decision Criteria

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–3 Assessed Values of Laptop Computers Using Decision Criteria Managerial Decision Making

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Step 6: Selecting an Alternative

Choosing the best alternative
The alternative with the highest

6– Step 6: Selecting an Alternative Choosing the best alternative The alternative
total weight is chosen.

Step 7: Implementing the Alternative

Putting the chosen alternative into action.

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Exhibit 6–4 Evaluation of Laptop Alternatives Against Weighted Criteria

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–4 Evaluation of Laptop Alternatives Against Weighted Criteria Managerial Decision Making

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Step 8: Evaluating the Decision’s Effectiveness

The soundness of the decision is judged

6– Step 8: Evaluating the Decision’s Effectiveness The soundness of the decision
by its outcomes.
How effectively was the problem resolved by outcomes resulting from the chosen alternatives?
If the problem was not resolved, what went wrong?

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Exhibit 6–5 Decisions in the Management Functions

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–5 Decisions in the Management Functions Managerial Decision Making

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Making Decisions

Rationality
Managers make consistent, value-maximizing choices with specified constraints.
Assumptions are that decision

6– Making Decisions Rationality Managers make consistent, value-maximizing choices with specified constraints.
makers:
Are perfectly rational, fully objective, and logical.
Have carefully defined the problem and identified all viable alternatives.
Have a clear and specific goal
Will select the alternative that maximizes outcomes in the organization’s interests rather than in their personal interests.

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Exhibit 6–6 Assumptions of Rationality

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–6 Assumptions of Rationality Managerial Decision Making

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Making Decisions (cont’d)

Bounded Rationality
Managers make decisions rationally, but are limited (bounded) by

6– Making Decisions (cont’d) Bounded Rationality Managers make decisions rationally, but are
their ability to process information.
Assumptions are that decision makers:
Will not seek out or have knowledge of all alternatives
Will satisfice—choose the first alternative encountered that satisfactorily solves the problem—rather than maximize the outcome of their decision by considering all alternatives and choosing the best.
Satisficing, a combination of two words into one new word ("combining satisfy with suffice“), is a decision-making strategy that attempts to meet an acceptability threshold.

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The Role of Intuition
Intuitive decision making
Making decisions on the basis of experience,

6– The Role of Intuition Intuitive decision making Making decisions on the
feelings, and accumulated judgment.

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Exhibit 6–7 What is Intuition?

Source: Based on L. A. Burke and M. K.

6– Exhibit 6–7 What is Intuition? Source: Based on L. A. Burke
Miller, “Taking the Mystery Out of Intuitive Decision Making,” Academy of Management Executive, October 1999, pp. 91–99.

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Categories of Decisions

Programmed Decisions
Situations occurred often enough to enable decision rules to

Categories of Decisions Programmed Decisions Situations occurred often enough to enable decision
be developed and applied in the future
Made in response to recurring organizational problems
Nonprogrammed Decisions – in response to unique, poorly defined and largely unstructured, and have important consequences to the organization

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Types of Problems and Decisions

Structured Problems
Involve goals that clear.
Are familiar (have occurred

6– Types of Problems and Decisions Structured Problems Involve goals that clear.
before).
Are easily and completely defined—information about the problem is available and complete.
Programmed Decision
A repetitive decision that can be handled by a routine approach.

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Types of Programmed Decisions

Policy
A general guideline for making a decision about a

6– Types of Programmed Decisions Policy A general guideline for making a
structured problem.
Procedure
A series of interrelated steps that a manager can use to respond (applying a policy) to a structured problem.
Rule
An explicit statement that limits what a manager or employee can or cannot do.

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Policy, Procedure, and Rule Examples

Policy
Accept all customer-returned merchandise.
Procedure
Follow all steps for completing

6– Policy, Procedure, and Rule Examples Policy Accept all customer-returned merchandise. Procedure
merchandise return documentation.
Rules
Managers must approve all refunds over $50.00.
No credit purchases are refunded for cash.

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Problems and Decisions (cont’d)

Unstructured Problems
Problems that are new or unusual and for

6– Problems and Decisions (cont’d) Unstructured Problems Problems that are new or
which information is ambiguous or incomplete.
Problems that will require custom-made solutions.
Nonprogrammed Decisions
Decisions that are unique and nonrecurring.
Decisions that generate unique responses.

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Decisions and Decision Making

Many decisions that managers deal with every day involve

Decisions and Decision Making Many decisions that managers deal with every day
at least some degree of uncertainty and require nonprogrammed decision making
May be difficult to make
Made amid changing factors
Information may be unclear
May have to deal with conflicting points of view

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Exhibit 6–8 Programmed versus Nonprogrammed Decisions

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–8 Programmed versus Nonprogrammed Decisions Managerial Decision Making

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Decision-Making Conditions

Certainty
A situation in which a manager can make an accurate decision

6– Decision-Making Conditions Certainty A situation in which a manager can make
because the outcome of every alternative choice is known.
Risk
A situation in which the manager is able to estimate the likelihood (probability) of outcomes that result from the choice of particular alternatives.

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Exhibit 6–9 Expected Value for Revenues from the Addition of One Ski Lift

Expected Expected × Probability = Value

6– Exhibit 6–9 Expected Value for Revenues from the Addition of One
of Each Event Revenues Alternative
Heavy snowfall $850,000 0.3 = $255,000
Normal snowfall 725,000 0.5 = 362,500
Light snowfall 350,000 0.2 = 70,000 $687,500

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Decision-Making Conditions

Uncertainty
Limited information prevents estimation of outcome probabilities for alternatives associated with

6– Decision-Making Conditions Uncertainty Limited information prevents estimation of outcome probabilities for
the problem and may force managers to rely on intuition, hunches, and “gut feelings”.
Maximax: the optimistic manager’s choice to maximize the maximum payoff
Maximin: the pessimistic manager’s choice to maximize the minimum payoff
Minimax: the manager’s choice to minimize maximum regret.

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Exhibit 6–10 Payoff Matrix

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–10 Payoff Matrix Managerial Decision Making

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Exhibit 6–11 Regret Matrix

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–11 Regret Matrix Managerial Decision Making

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Decision-Making Styles

Dimensions of Decision-Making Styles
Ways of thinking
Rational, orderly, and consistent
Intuitive, creative, and

6– Decision-Making Styles Dimensions of Decision-Making Styles Ways of thinking Rational, orderly,
unique
Tolerance for ambiguity
Low tolerance: require consistency and order
High tolerance: multiple thoughts simultaneously

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Decision-Making Styles (cont’d)

Types of Decision Makers
Directive
Use minimal information and consider few alternatives.
Analytic
Make

6– Decision-Making Styles (cont’d) Types of Decision Makers Directive Use minimal information
careful decisions in unique situations.
Conceptual
Maintain a broad outlook and consider many alternatives in making decisions.
Behavioral
Avoid conflict by working well with others and being receptive to suggestions.

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Exhibit 6–12 Decision-Making Matrix

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–12 Decision-Making Matrix Managerial Decision Making

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Exhibit 6–13 Common Decision-Making Errors and Biases

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–13 Common Decision-Making Errors and Biases Managerial Decision Making

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Decision-Making Biases and Errors

Heuristics
Using “rules of thumb” to simplify decision making.
Overconfidence Bias
Holding

6– Decision-Making Biases and Errors Heuristics Using “rules of thumb” to simplify
unrealistically positive views of one’s self and one’s performance.
Immediate Gratification Bias
Choosing alternatives that offer immediate rewards and that to avoid immediate costs.

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Decision-Making Biases and Errors (cont’d)

Anchoring Effect
Fixating on initial information and ignoring subsequent

6– Decision-Making Biases and Errors (cont’d) Anchoring Effect Fixating on initial information
information.
Selective Perception Bias
Selecting organizing and interpreting events based on the decision maker’s biased perceptions.
Confirmation Bias
Seeking out information that reaffirms past choices and discounting contradictory information.

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Decision-Making Biases and Errors (cont’d)

Framing Bias
Selecting and highlighting certain aspects of a

6– Decision-Making Biases and Errors (cont’d) Framing Bias Selecting and highlighting certain
situation while ignoring other aspects.
Availability Bias
Losing decision-making objectivity by focusing on the most recent events.
Representation Bias
Drawing analogies and seeing identical situations when none exist.
Randomness Bias
Creating unfounded meaning out of random events.

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Decision-Making Biases and Errors (cont’d)

Sunk Costs Errors
Forgetting that current actions cannot influence

6– Decision-Making Biases and Errors (cont’d) Sunk Costs Errors Forgetting that current
past events and relate only to future consequences.
Self-Serving Bias
Taking quick credit for successes and blaming outside factors for failures.
Hindsight Bias
Mistakenly believing that an event could have been predicted once the actual outcome is known (after-the-fact).

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Exhibit 6–14 Overview of Managerial Decision Making

Managerial Decision Making

6– Exhibit 6–14 Overview of Managerial Decision Making Managerial Decision Making

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Decision Making for Today’s World

Guidelines for making effective decisions:
Understand cultural differences.
Know when

6– Decision Making for Today’s World Guidelines for making effective decisions: Understand
it’s time to call it quits.
Use an effective decision-making process.
Habits of highly reliable organizations (HROs)
Are not tricked by their success.
Defer to the experts on the front line.
Let unexpected circumstances provide the solution.
Embrace complexity.
Anticipate, but also anticipate their limits.

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Characteristics of an Effective Decision-Making Process

It focuses on what is important.
It is

6– Characteristics of an Effective Decision-Making Process It focuses on what is
logical and consistent.
It acknowledges both subjective and objective thinking and blends analytical with intuitive thinking.
It requires only as much information and analysis as is necessary to resolve a particular dilemma.
It encourages and guides the gathering of relevant information and informed opinion.
It is straightforward, reliable, easy to use, and flexible.

Managerial Decision Making

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