CH 7: Individual & Group Decision Making Flashcards

1
Q

decision

A

choice made among available alternatives

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2
Q

Decision making

A

Process of identifying and choosing alternative courses of actions

Can be made rationally but is often nonrational

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3
Q

Rational decision making

A

Explains how managers SHOULD make decisions

Assumes managers will make logical decisions that will be optimal in furthering orgs best interests

Also called the classical model

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4
Q

4 steps to rational decision making

A

1-identify problem/opportunity
2-think of alternative solutions
3-evaluate alternatives and select a solution
4-implement/evaluate the solution chosen

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5
Q

assumptions with the rational model

A

complete information, no uncertainity

logical unemotional analysis

best decision for the org

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6
Q

complete information, no uncertainity

A

Assumes that individuals have complete error free information with no uncertainty

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7
Q

logical unemotional analysis

A

Assumes that people are logical and can complete and unemotional analysis with no prejudices or emotional blind sports

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8
Q

best decision for the org

A

Assumes that one is confident that this is the best decision of the organization

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9
Q

examples of things getting in the way of perfectly rational decision making

A

Time and money constraints
Imperfect information
Conflicting goals
More

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10
Q

non rational dec making and types

A

Assumes that decision making is nearly always uncertain and risky-making it hard for managers to make optimal decisions

Satisficing
Intuition

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11
Q

bounded rationality

A

Developed in 1950s by herbert simon
Suggest rational decision making is limited by many constraints

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12
Q

Satisficing model

A

Bc of the many constraints, managers don’t make an exhaustive search for the best alternative/ decisions

They seek alternative that is satisfactory not optimal

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13
Q

Intuition model and what it stems from

A

Making a choice without the use of conscious thought or logical inference

Stems from
-Expertise:
-Automated experience:

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14
Q

expertise

A

A person’s explicit and tacit knowledge about a person, a situation, an object, or a decision

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15
Q

Automated experience:

A

The involuntary emotional response to those same matters

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16
Q

Tips for improving intuition

A

Trust intuitive judgements
Seek feedback
Test your intuitive success rate
Try visualizing solutions
Challenge your intuition

17
Q

Evidence based decision making

A

The translation of principles based on best evidence into organizational practice which brings rationality to the decision making process

18
Q

7 IMPLEMENTATION PRINCIPLES of EVIDENCE-BASED MANAGEMENT

A
  1. Treat your organization as an unfinished prototype.
  2. Don’t brag, just use facts.
  3. See yourself and your organization as outsiders do.
  4. Evidence-based management is not just for senior executives.
  5. Like everything else, you still need to sell it.
  6. If all else fails, slow the spread of bad practice.
  7. The best diagnostic question: What happens when people fail?
19
Q

business analytics

A

Fancy forms of business data analysis
Ex- portfolio analysis, time-series forecast

20
Q

predictive modeling

A

Data mining technique used to predict future behavior and anticipate the consequences of change

21
Q

big data

A

Includes data in corporate databases and also web browsing data trails, social network communications, senor data, and surveillance data

22
Q

Big data analytics

A

The process of examining large amounts of data of a variety of types to uncover hidden patterns, unknown correlations, and other useful information

23
Q

uses of big data

A

Analyzing consumer behavior
Improving hiring and personnel management.
Tracking movies, music, TV, and reading data.
Exploiting farm data.
Advancing health and medicine.
Aiding public policy

24
Q

Decision making style

A

Reflects the composition of how an individual perceives/responds to information

25
Q

Value orientations

A

Reflects the extent to which a person focuses on either task and technical concerns or on people and social concerns when making decisions

26
Q

Tolerance for ambiguity

A

Indicates the extent to which a person has a high need for structure or control in his or her life

27
Q

decision making styles

A

conceptual- H tol, ppl focused

analytical- H tol, focused on task

directive- L tol, task focused

behavioral- L tol, ppl focused

28
Q

Personal knowledge of decision making style

A

Helps you understand yourself and facilitates self improvement

Can increase your ability to influence others

Gives you awareness of how people can use same info to arrive at diff decisions

29
Q

4 ineffective reactions to decision making

A

relaxed avoidance
relaxed change
defensive avoidance
panic

30
Q

Relaxed avoidance

A

not taking actions bc of the belief that there will be no big consequences

31
Q

Relaxed change

A

Realizing complete inaction will have bad consequences but opts for the first avail alternative

32
Q

Defensive avoidance

A

can’t find a good solution so they procrastinate , pass the buck, or denies the risk

33
Q

Panic

A

so frantic to get rid of the problem that they can’t deal will the situation realistically

34
Q

3 effective reactions to decision making

A

importance, credibility, urgency

35
Q

importance

A
  • how high priority is the siutation
36
Q

credibility

A

how believable is the information in the situation

37
Q

Urgency

A

how quickly must i act on the situation

38
Q

Nine common decision making bias

A
  1. The availability bias.
  2. The representativeness bias.
  3. The confirmation bias.
  4. The sunk-cost bias.
  5. The anchoring and adjustment bias.
  6. The overconfidence bias.
  7. The hindsight bias.
  8. The framing bias.
  9. The escalation of commitment bias.