Decision Making
Decision Making
Decision Making
Introduction
Decision making is a daily activity for any human being. There is
no exception about that. When it comes to business organizations,
decision making is a habit and a process as well.
Effective and successful decisions make profit to the company
and unsuccessful ones make losses. Therefore, corporate decision
making process is the most critical process in any organization.
In the decision making process, we choose one course of action
from a few possible alternatives. In the process of decision making,
we may use many tools, techniques and perceptions.
In addition, we may make our own private decisions or may
prefer a collective decision.
Usually, decision making is hard. Majority of corporate decisions
involve some level of dissatisfaction or conflict with another party.
Let's have a look at the decision making process in detail.
STEP 7: Review decision and consequences. In this step you experience the
results of your decision and evaluate whether or not it has solved or helped to
solve the problem in Step 1. If yes, you may stay with the decision. If no, you may
repeat certain steps of the process in order to make a new decision.
up your own mind. Sometimes it may be a good idea to consult more than one
source so that your information is not biased.
10. Listen to your inner voice; trust your intuition. What feels right?
Step 1: Identification of the purpose of the decision
In this step, the problem is thoroughly analysed. There are a couple
of questions one should ask when it comes to identifying the purpose
of the decision.
What exactly is the problem?
Why the problem should be solved?
Who are the affected parties of the problem?
Does the problem have a deadline or a specific time-line?
Step 2: Information gathering
A problem of an organization will have many stakeholders. In
addition, there can be dozens of factors involved and affected by the
problem.
In the process of solving the problem, you will have to gather as
much as information related to the factors and stakeholders involved
in the problem. For the process of information gathering, tools such as
'Check Sheets' can be effectively used.
Step 3: Principles for judging the alternatives
In this step, the baseline criteria for judging the alternatives
should be set up. When it comes to defining the criteria,
organizational goals as well as the corporate culture should be taken
into consideration.
As an example, profit is one of the main concerns in every
decision making process. Companies usually do not make decisions
that reduce profits, unless it is an exceptional case. Likewise, baseline
principles should be identified related to the problem in hand.
Step 4: Brainstorm and analyse the different choices
For this step, brainstorming to list down all the ideas is the best
option. Before the idea generation step, it is vital to understand the
causes of the problem and prioritization of causes.
For this, you can make use of Cause-and-Effect diagrams and
Pareto Chart tool. Cause-and-Effect diagram helps you to identify all
possible causes of the problem and Pareto chart helps you to prioritize
and identify the causes with highest effect.
Then, you can move on generating all possible solutions
(alternatives) for the problem in hand.
Step 5: Evaluation of alternatives
Use your judgement principles and decision-making criteria to
evaluate each alternative. In this step, experience and effectiveness
of the judgement principles come into play. You need to compare each
alternative for their positives and negatives.
Step 6: Select the best alternative
Once you go through from Step 1 to Step 5, this step is easy. In
addition, the selection of the best alternative is an informed decision
since you have already followed a methodology to derive and select
the best alternative.
Step 7: Execute the decision
Convert your decision into a plan or a sequence of activities.
Execute your plan by yourself or with the help of subordinates.
Step 8: Evaluate the results
Evaluate the outcome of your decision. See whether there is
anything you should learn and then correct in future decision making.
This is one of the best practices that will improve your decisionmaking skills.
Conclusion