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Title: B300a


1
B300a
  • TUTORIAL WEEK EIGHT

2
B300 Overview
Business behaviour in a changing world
Decision making
Strategy
Organisation
Policy
3
THIS TUTORIAL.
  • CHAPTER 11 - The Cognitive Perspective on
    Strategic Decision-Making by C. Schwenk
  • CHAPTER 12 - The Impact of Organisational Culture
    on Approaches to Organisational Problem-Solving
    by P. Bate

4
CHAPTER 11 - The Cognitive Perspective on
Strategic Decision-Making by C. Schwenk.
  • In this chapter four topics are summarised
  • heuristics and biases,
  • strategic assumptions,
  • analogy,
  • metaphor.
  • These topics give us a potentially useful way in
    understanding decision-making and to solve
    strategic problems.

5
Heuristics
  • Heuristics are typically based on what worked
    before will work again. We have a vast array of
    heuristics to make our lives easier.
  •  
  • Representativeness and anchoring are sometimes
    known as heuristics, "rules of thumb" that humans
    use to perform abstract reasoning in cognitively
    economical ways. They are innate and
    human-universal because they emerge from the same
    species-wide design.

6
Bias and heuristics
  • Bias is a tendency to support or oppose a
    particular person or thing in an unfair way by
    allowing personal opinions to influence your
    judgment.
  •  
  • Researchers have identified a number of
    heuristics or rule of thumb which
    decision-maker use to simplify complex problems
    and a number of decisional biases which may have
    an impact on strategic decisions.
  •  
  • Heuristics may provide short cuts in processing
    information. Heuristics are helpful, but they can
    also be too easy and can consequently make us
    complacent.

7
Heuristics and decision making
  • Kahneman (1974) said heuristics are useful, but
    sometimes they lead to severe and systematic
    error.
  • Strategic decisions are often influenced by
    judgments about the probability of certain types
    of changes in the environment.. Decision makers
    judge a future event to be likely if it is easy
    to recall past occurrences of the event.

8
Table of Selected Heuristics and Biases
 
9
  • In summary the illusion of control, and other
    biases identified in this research may affect
    strategic decisions by restricting the range of
    strategic alternatives considered and the
    information used to evaluate these alternatives.
  •  
  • It is likely that multiple biases affect
    strategic decision making and reinforce each
    other.

10
Cognitive maps
  • Cognitive maps consist of concepts about aspects
    of the decision environment and beliefs about
    cause-and-effect relationships between them. Such
    maps serve as interpretive lenses which help
    decision-makers select certain aspects of an
    issue as important for diagnosis. Direct
    information search in organisations and cognitive
    maps may exist at the organisational level. They
    are discovered by organisation members and used
    as a basis for action.
  • Cognitive maps may help researchers to describe
    more effectively the ways executives understand
    relations among industry factors, and to
    determine which factors are taken most seriously
    by executives in the formulation of their
    strategies.
  • Cognitive maps may also help clarify the
    processes by which industry factors affect
    strategies.

11
Schemata
  • Schemata is sometimes used in connection with
    cognitive maps. The distinction between them is
    not very clear!
  • Schemata is a drawing that represents an idea or
    theory and makes it easier to understand.Schemata
    are evoked by cues in a problem-solving setting
    and they provide frames for problems which makes
    it unnecessary for decision-makers to diagnose
    completely each element of a new strategic
    problem.

12
  • Human cognitive limitations introduce bias into
    the development of strategic assumptions and may
    lead to simplification in strategic schemata.
  •  
  • These biases and simplifications affect strategic
    decisions when decision-makers existing schemata
    are used in diagnosing and framing new strategic
    problems. Analysis of executives strategic
    schemata helps explain strategic choices in
    response to environmental and industry forces.

13
Analogy
  • The process of drawing analogies seems to be
    very common when organisational actors are tying
    to understand an ambiguous or novel situation.
    Analogies are more likely to shape strategic
    problem formulations when they are shared by
    organisational members.
  •  
  • In strategic decisions which involve a great
    deal of uncertainty and complexity, the use of
    simple analogies may mislead the decision makers
    to use analogies to define complex problems, and
    they may not recognise that there are critical
    differences between the analogies and the
    decision situations they face.

14
Strategic Problem Comprehension
15
The model is based in the assumption that there
are two ways in which understanding of strategic
problems can be achieved
  • 1 In order to comprehend some type of strategic
    problems, data may be carefully analysed and a
    new schema may be developed
  • 2 Understanding may be achieved by applying a
    previously developed schema to the current
    strategic problem. This involves less diagnosis
    and information search.
  • Mintzberg states that some case solutions are
    designed to deal with strategic problems. On
    other cases, preexisting solutions which were
    developed for other problems are applied to the
    problem. Mintzberg suggested that two
    fundamentally different thought processes
    underlay the activities of design and search.
  •  
  • In this model, heuristics and biases affect the
    development of strategic assumptions and
    cognitive maps, which then affect the development
    of strategic schemata.

16
Speculations on the effects of cognitive
heuristics and biases on strategic assumptions
and cognitive maps provide the basis for
hypotheses to guide future research, as follows
  • 1.  Decision makers subject to the illusion of
    control will overestimate the causal role of
    their own actions in constructing their cognitive
    maps.
  • 2. Cognitive heuristics and biases will reduce
    the number of variables included in decision
    makers cognitive maps.
  • 3.     Heuristics and biases will lead to a
    smaller of conflicting strategic assumptions on
    cognitive map when dealing with complex problems.
  • 4.     Decision makers who report greater number
    of recent successful business decisions will
    assign a larger causal role to their own action
    in their cognitive maps.
  • 5. Differences in strategists personal
    experience and industry experience will affect
    their choice of analogies in constructing
    cognitive maps.

17
Conclusions
  • Decision makers who report greater number of
    recent successful business decision will be more
    likely to define new strategic problems using
    analogies to situations in which they previously
    had a high level of personal control.
  • Differences in the strategists personal
    experiences and industry experience will
    determine which cues are used in selecting
    analogies to define new strategic problems.
  • A better understanding of strategists cognitive
    structures and process will provide a basis for
    better recommendations for improving strategic
    decision making.

18
CHAPTER 12 - The Impact of Organisational
Culture on Approaches to Organisational Problem
Solving by P. Bate
  • In this chapter Bate examines how cultures
    impact upon decision making.
  • People in organisations evolve in their daily
    interactions with one another a system of shared
    perspectives of collectively held and
    sanctioned definitions of the situation which
    make up the culture of the organisations.

19
Culture creates our cognitive makeup. It
  • Provides us with a language
  • Provides us with important background knowledge
  • Provides us with ways of thinking about the
    world
  • Provides us with tools
  • Provides social and cognitive structures
  • Provides us with ways of solving problems.

20
What is culture?
  • The term culture can defined as the meaning or
    aspects of the conceptual structures which people
    hold in common and which define the social or
    organisational reality.

21
Research
  • Studies measured the culture in 3 organisations.
    The task was to build up a picture from the data
    of how individuals defend aspects of their work
    situation, to ascertain from this which meaning
    or definitions were widely shared in the
    organisation. The main aim was to identify those
    aspects of each culture that had a strong impact
    on organisational problem-solving.
  •  
  • They were identified as follows
  •  
  • unemotionality
  • depersonalization
  • subordination
  • conservation
  • isolationism
  • antipathy
  •  
  • Your tutor will explain these terms to you and
    will give examples relevant to your regional
    area.

22
Findings
  • The findings from the three research studies
    support the view that organisational culture can
    shape patterns of organisational behaviour, and
    that culture orientations can constrain
    problem-solving behaviour.
  •  
  • The table on the next slide suggests six basic
    organisational issues, in the form of questions,
    to which six cultural orientations are the
    imperfect??? solution.
  •  

23
 
 
24
WEEK 8 ACTIVITIES
  • Please select from the following activities which
    could be undertaken by students at this stage
  • Activity Twelve (page 53 of the Decision Making
    Study Guide)
  • Activity Thirteen (page 55 of the Decision Making
    Guide)

25
READING TO BE COMPLETED BY NEXT WEEK
  • Please re-read pages 52 - 56 of the Decision
    Making Study Guide to refresh your study of
    Chapters eleven and twelve.
  • Please read pages 209 - 232 (Chapters 13 and 14)
    of Decision Making for Business Text Book.
  • If you have time, read pages 57 - 62 of the
    Decision Making Study Guide to prepare you for
    next week.
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