Schlagwort-Archive: Process

Decision-making reloaded

Incredibly, we make 20,000 decisions a day. With sixteen hours that we spend every day awake, these are about 20 decisions per minute. In the last minute, you may have decided to:

  • open your IT device,
  • choose between email and social media,
  • prefer one link over another when skimming,
  • prefer the title Decision reloaded to a Forbes List 2021,
  • open this post
  • skip the first paragraph,
  • look at the picture,
  • go back to the beginning of the post,
  • believe or not that we make 20,000 decisions a day,
  • read on with this assumption,
  • believe that these are 20 decisions per minute,
  • continue reading on this basis for the time being,
  • ignore up the ringing phone,
  • take a look at the rest of the article,
  • continue reading based on the remarkable keywords,
  • delay your previous activity,
  • read on despite this list,
  • understand that decisions are an essential part for you, even if not 20 times a minute,
  • use the topic for yourself,
  • recognize that 20 decisions have taken place in the last minute.

You have likely thought about similar considerations in the past minute – mostly unconsciously. With such a frequent activity, it makes sense to refresh our understanding of decision-making.

However, the emphasis of this post is not on the small decisions that we continually make unconsciously, but we turn to the big ones that have far-reaching effects and are made consciously. For this, we look at the time span and the components of a decision, the alternatives, the lasting of the impact, and the responsible parties.

  • Deciding – an act or rather a process?
    The blow of the hammer of a judge or auctioneer is the moment when a decision is concluded. Through this official act of an authorized person, a decision enters into force, or a final choice is made. The decision-making process needs time to work out the components, weigh them against each other, establish them with a binding act and evaluate the effects afterward.
    Depending on the leadership style, (de)centralized top-down vs. bottom-up, leaders satisfy their mindset. The process-oriented decisions, which should turn those affected into participants and make implementation more likely, are the more viable ones.
  • The moment of decision
    The “right” moment is a matter of belief. There are the reactive leaders, who make decisions as late as possible, if at all – There is nothing left but to rectify the situation. Then there are the active ones who roll up their sleeves and solve a difficulty directly – Where is the problem? What can we do? We do it like this. Then there are the pro-actives who try to foresee difficulties with a far-reaching radar and make preventive decisions – We investigate these developments and make sure that nothing unforeseen happens. And eventually, the passive decision-makers (what an oxymoron), who follow the illusion that by avoiding a decision, they would not decide – We agreed after lengthy negotiations that we should definitely think about when we could meet to discuss how to proceed.
    There is no one right moment to decide what must/should/could be determined. The late decision has more information, but follow-up problems are already happening. A timely decision is the last chance to prevent the consequences. The proactive ones lack information and may deal with obstacles that never occur. The important thing is that a decision is made at all.
  • Components of a decision
    Reducing a decision to one act does not meet its complexity. It is the interplay of several aspects that together constitute a decision. It starts with the triggers that determine the pressure to decide – e.g., deadlines, imminent danger, stakeholder demands. Often several goals have to be reconciled with each other. The search for solutions becomes more difficult due to a lack of information about the past, present, and future. Since there are always many options to choose from, at least three should be worked out. To avoid surprises and unintended consequences, the possible impacts must be anticipated, e.g., through appropriate scenarios in which the alternatives are “tested”. To clarify the role of the decision-makers, they need outlined tasks, competencies, in the sense of agency, and a firmly outlined responsibility that defines the consequences for the decision-makers.
    These components take time, i.e., the decision-making process.
  • Decision alternatives
    The number and the spread of options are an essential aspect of decision-making. Let us consider inevitable decisions where we believe we have no choice, although there is always a choice between one action or no action. This means that we always have at least two alternatives – even if doing nothing is always the worse alternative.
    Experienced executives know that there are always at least three options to take full advantage of the available space.
  • Half-life of decisions
    Let us imagine we would be standing on a balcony. A conflagration is blazing in the flat beside us. We can hold out on the balcony for fear of jumping – and burn to death. Or we can jump down from the second floor – in the worst case, we break our necks. Less decisive people will say it does not matter what they choose. However, there is a higher probability of survival in the jump. In any case, the NECESSARY decision has an infinite half-life. You either immediately end up in eternal rest or continue to live as if nothing had happened. With all other decisions that have no final consequences, you can always revise your decision afterward.
    The need for action increases according to the importance and the urgency. The more people affected, the greater the reach, the more constant the consequences, and the greater the costs, the better you have to prepare and evaluate the decisions.
  • Who decides?
    A decision has already been preceded by another significant one – Who decides? The choice of who decides is the responsibility of the orderers – e.g., a steering committee or the recipients. And before that, the question arises, who chooses this circle. And so on. Those assigned, who do not want to be burdened with responsibility, call for public decision-making and thus delegate responsibility and consequences to the majority. According to the Highlander principle (There can only be one), however, one specific person should decide, otherwise, there is no clear accountability. Nobody decides when several decide. In this case, everyone is collectively to blame, and thus no one.
    The unambiguous assignment of one person increases the quality of a decision.

Bottom line: Until now, the personal income also depended on decision-making because decision-makers were placed at management levels. In the course of Theory Y, agility, and servant leadership, the detached leaders become obsolete. They are replaced by the employees on-site. However, this does not change the decision-making process, the choice of the moment, the building blocks, the need for alternatives, the half-life, and the clear mandate despite decision-makers at all levels. Besides the doing, decision-making is the most crucial element in business and the last resort for the leaders, who are becoming obsolete with the current collaboration models.

Instructions are for newbies

There are occasions when our character appears. For instance, if you squeeze into a parking space, even though someone is already parking according to regulations. Or when you give vent to your lack of empathy and your disrespectful behavior at work. Or if you ignore any manual. We know people who have learned the assembly of a furniture item already in the cradle and who use their common sense to assemble a shelf or a chair – and sometimes parts remain, or something is missing.

This approach is also followed by many in their daily work because they know what to do;-) start where the problem is, try hard and adjust carefully. This approach provides in the short term a satisfying feeling for all tasks that results in endless Sisyphus work. There are solutions, like examples and recipes, which prevent misleading approaches. What does such manual need?

  • The goal
    The presentation of the desired future, with conditions as well as results and use cases, creates expectations in the mind of the user. Many activities can be derived from this picture.
    In today’s offices there are complex tasks that are made easier with such manuals. For example, the design of business processes and the building of data models help to coordinate the involved areas. At various levels, goals are developed, which help to adjust in one direction – change activities need a vision, strategic goals, and whatever stimulates the imagination of those involved (e.g., values, SWOT, common terminology).
  • The parts
    The manual mainly provides an overview of the required components. In the case of a furniture item, there is an overview of all parts and their quantity. If you get an outline, you can be sure that everything is complete. Additionally, it gives you an understanding of which parts you are using.
    To master the complex interaction between different areas and systems, you need an overview of the inventory, which aspects have to be considered. Corresponding models provide these structures – a process has start and end events, steps, persons/ job positions carrying out the process, input and output data, IT systems, and other components as required.
  • The process
    Nowadays, the results are small and nested. It is crucial to know in which order something has to be done to fulfill the result. Therefore, a manual provides steps and their sequence so that eventually, everything fits together, and nothing is left over.
    Changes do not happen immediately but take time. Especially the size of the affected areas and the distribution across the world increase the duration. Here, too, some parts have to be assembled into components before they make up the whole. A new IT system needs precise requirements so that the expectations of the users can be met. Any subsequent changes undermine the so far achieved interim results. Therefore, the components must be planned in a way that they can be assembled at the right time and with little effort – an IT system requires an infrastructure of hard- and net-ware, databases, procedures, formulas, and rules as well as the correct terms and appropriate languages.
  • The result
    The holistic look at the outcome and its application is extended in the manual by including illustrations and explanations of the parts, the components, and the final result. Eventually, you will have a good understanding of how the whole thing works together.
    Due to the complexity of the interests and solutions, many people forego a well-reasoned approach. It may also be explained with the wishful thinking that has led to the hype of agility that takes the burden of decision making away from those responsible. This kind of established muddling through is only possible by virtue of the commitment of the employees, who take over the tasks of the managers – which makes the leaders obsolete. There is a blueprint for almost every result – be it an existing solution that can be bought off the shelf (e.g., SAP), or a standard (e.g., ISO56002:2019 Innovation Management) that describes everything like a manual.

Bottom line: If you are in the water up to your neck, then you have no overview. With a corresponding manual, you could get it and make a solution more likely. Unfortunately, most people are already up to the lower edge of their upper lip. The adhocrats reveal themselves by their expressions: We already know what to do; We do not need a plan; Instructions are for newbies; This is all much too abstract. Tutorials are the exact opposite of abstract philosophies of which these people are afraid. These manuals consist of a clear goal, an overview of the components, a procedure, and a presentation of the result. And this without lengthy derivation and justification. The only remaining objection would be that not everything is explained – which nobody would want to read. It is now an excellent moment to readjust one’s mindset and understand that experts never work without such a recipe, because: Instructions are not only for newbies.