McShane/Von Glinow M:OB 3e
Decision Making and
Creativity
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved 1
Rational Choice Paradigm
Effective decision makers
identify, select, and apply the
best possible alternative
Two rational choice elements
1. Subjective expected utility
determines choice with highest
value (maximization)
2. Decision making process
systematic decision making stages
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Subjective Expected Utility
Foundation of rational choice
paradigm
Calculating choice with the
highest expected satisfaction
(maximization)
“Expected” — probability that
selected choice will result in a
specific outcome
“Utility” — positive/negative
valence of the outcome
(selection criterion)
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Rational Choice
Decision-making Process
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Problem Identification Challenges
Problems/opportunities are constructed from
ambiguous information, not “given” to us
Influenced by cognitive and emotional biases
Five problem identification challenges
Stakeholder framing
Decisive leadership
Solution-focused problems
Perceptual defense
Mental models
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Identifying Problems Effectively
Be aware of perceptual and diagnostic limitations
Fight against pressure to look decisive
Maintain “divine discontent” (aversion to
complacency)
Discuss the situation with colleagues -- see different
perspectives
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Making Choices: Rational vs OB
Observations
more
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Making Choices: Rational vs OB
Observations (con’t)
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Biased Decision Heuristics
Anchoring and adjustment
We are anchored by and don’t move far from an initial anchor point
(e.g. initial offer price)
Availability heuristic
we estimate probabilities by how easy we can recall the event, even
though other factors influence ease of recall
Representativeness heuristic
we estimate probability of something by its similarity to something
known rather than by more precise statistics
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Problems with Maximization
People don’t try to select choice with highest value
(maximization) because:
Alternatives appear sequentially, not all at once
People lack motivation/ability to process volumes of information
How decision makers respond to maximization problems
1. Satisficing – choose first “good enough” alternative
2. Oversimplifying decision calculations
3. Avoiding the decision
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Emotions and Making Choices
Emotions form preferences before we consciously
evaluate those choices
Moods and emotions influence how well we follow
the decision process
We ‘listen in’ on our emotions and use that
information to make choices
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Intuitive Decision Making
Ability to know when a problem or opportunity exists
and select the best course of action without conscious
reasoning
Intuition as an emotional experience
Gut feelings are emotional signals
Not all emotional signals are intuition
Intuition as rapid nonconscious analysis
Uses action scripts
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Making Better Choices
1. Systematically evaluate alternatives against relevant
factors
2. Be aware of effects of emotions on decision
preferences and evaluation process
3. Scenario planning
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Decision Evaluation Problems
Confirmation bias
Nonconsciously bias evidence about the choice
e.g., overemphasize and more easily notice positive features of selected
alternative
Escalation of commitment
Repeating or further investing in an apparently bad decision
Caused by:
self-justification effect
self-enhancement effect
prospect theory effect
sunk costs effect
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Evaluating Decisions Better
1. Separate decision choosers from evaluators
2. Establish a preset level to abandon the project
3. Find sources of systematic and clear feedback
4. Involve several people in the evaluation process
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Creative Process Model
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Characteristics of Creative People
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Creative Work Environments
Learning orientation
Encourage experimentation
Tolerate mistakes
Intrinsically motivating work
Task significance, autonomy, feedback
Open communication and sufficient resources
Unclear/complex effects of team competition and
time pressure on creativity
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Creative Activities
Redefine Associativ Cross-
the Problem e Pollination
Play
• Revisit • Storytelling • Diverse teams
abandoned
projects • Artistic activities • Information
sessions
• Explore issue • Morphological
with other analysis • Informal social
people interaction
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Levels of Employee Involvement
High: Employees responsible for entire
decision-making process
High Medium-High: Employees hear problem,
then collectively develop
recommendations
Medium-Low: Employees hear problem
Medium individually or collectively, then asked for
information relating to that problem
Low: Employees individually asked for
specific information but the problem is not
Low described to them
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Employee Involvement Model
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Contingencies of Involvement
Higher employee involvement is better when:
Decision • Problem is new & complex
Structure (i.e nonprogrammed decision)
Knowledge • Employees have relevant knowledge
Source beyond leader
Decision • Employees would lack commitment
Commitment unless involved
Risk of 1. Norms support firm’s goals
Conflict 2. Employee agreement likely
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McShane/Von Glinow M:OB 3e
6
Supplemental exhibit on subjective
expected utility (SEU)
Decision Making and
Creativity
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Subjective Expected Utility
Estimating the best possible alternative
(maximization)
.2 Outcome 1 (+7)
Expected -- probability of an outcome .5
Choice A Outcome 2 (-2)
occurring .9
e.g., Chance that outcome 3 will occur is 90% if Outcome 3 (+1)
choice ‘A’ is chosen, 30% if choice ‘B’ is chosen
Utility -- Value or happiness produced by .8 Outcome 1 (+7)
each option from value of expected
outcomes .2
Choice B Outcome 2 (-2)
.3
Choice ‘B’ has higher utility (value) than choice
Outcome 3 (+1)
‘A’
Choice ‘B’ expected utility is
(.8x7)+(.2x-2)+(.3x1)=6.4 Probability of Utility (expected
outcome occurring happiness)
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