Decision 2
Decision 2
Decision
Making
Why decision making
matters?
Decision making is important because it is the process
of creating choices by identifying a decision, gathering
information, and evaluating different alternatives.
Cognitive Biases
Decision makers can be influenced by distorted perceptions, even in favorable circumstances and accurate
information. Managers must understand this to make daily decisions and manage multiple individuals making
assessments and judgements.
Confirmation Bias
Confirmation bias is the tendency to favor information that confirms our judgment, paying more attention to information
that supports our preconceived views. We often accept information at face value, disregarding or diminishing the
significance of contradictory information
Framing Bias
Framing bias is the tendency to present a situation or problem positively, with studies showing that framing a positive
outcome is more influential than a negative outcome, as seen in public health messages.
Hindsight Bias
is the tendency to believe we would have accurately predicted an event's outcome after it is known. This bias is due to our
difficulty recalling the appearance of an uncertain event before realizing its outcomes. We tend to overestimate our
knowledge before reconstructing the past, preferring information that supports our judgment and ignoring or diminishing the
significance of information that contradicts it.
Anchoring Bias
is the tendency to fixate on initial information and fail to adjust for subsequent information, leading to a fixed opinion.
Halo Effect
The halo effect refers to the preference we have towards certain individuals or organizations due to their expertise in a
specific area, often giving their opinions special credence in other areas, such as sports stars' political opinions.
Overconfidence Bias
is when an individual's intuition overrides evidence, leading to overconfidence in decisions. This bias is more prevalent in
organizations where managers and employees are more knowledgeable about an issue, especially when considering issues
outside their area of expertise.
Status-Quo Bias
Decision makers often avoid change, favoring ideas that don't lead to significant changes, neglecting evidence and ideas
that support.
Pro-Innovation Bias
Pro-innovative bias favors new, innovative ideas over status-quo ones, believing they are superior, even if no evidence
supports them as useful or helpful, despite the absence of objective evidence.
Styles of Decision Making
According to Daniel Kahneman, who you’ll read more about in the next section, each of us has two separate minds that
compete for influence. One way to describe this is a conscious and a subconscious perspective. The subconscious mind
is automatic and intuitive, rapidly consolidating data and producing a decision almost immediately. The subconscious
mind works best with repeated experiences. The conscious, rational mind requires more effort, using logic and reason to
make a choice.
Rational decision making involves careful, logical, and data-driven processes, often time-consuming and costly. It's useful
for big decisions with multiple criteria. Evaluation stages require numeric values, and final analysis leans towards the easiest
measure. Executives typically make decisions based on the analysis, ensuring the decision is trustworthy and effective.
Evidence Based Decision Making
Evidence-based decision-making is a method used by HR professionals,
managers, and leaders to make decisions that impact the organization. It
relies on professional opinions, historical da reliable research, and
stakeholder opinions.
The NIC's EBDM initiative has three phases: Framework Development, Planning
Process, Implementation, Expansion to Statewide Structure, and Building EBDM
Capacity at the Individual, Agency, and System Levels.
Proof of Success
The emphasis of evidence-based thinking is relying on actual experimentation to demonstrate that a plan does indeed
provide a likelihood of success. By relying on actual evidence of this sort, much of the uncertainty about treatment
practices can be removed.
Data Collection, Sharing, and Analytics
One of the main reasons people have not relied on evidence-based decision making as strongly over the years is
that the evidence simply did not exist or was not accessible. Today, however, the advance of technology has
resulted in previously unparalleled amounts of data that can be collected, shared, organized, and analyzed in ways
never before imaginable.
Descriptive Analytics
This dramatic increase in the availability of data has led to the rapid development and maturation of the field of data
analytics.
Predictive Analytics
This work of projecting future trends is known as predictive analytics, and although it still obviously remains only a best
guess about the future, it is grounded in objective facts and trends and can provide a greater degree of likelihood as a
result.
Thank You!