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Business Decision Process

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Title: Business Decision Process


1
Business Decision Process
2
Overview
  • Steps in rational decision making
  • Tests of rationality?
  • Types of organizational decisions

3
Steps in Rational Decision Making in a
Choice problem
  • Define the problem
  • Generate alternative solutions
  • Identify criteria for choosing between solutions
  • Weight the criteria
  • Rate each alternative on each decision
  • Compute the optimal decision

4
Are people rational?
  • Decision makers forego best solution in favor of
    one that is acceptable or reasonable. They
    satisfice
  • People often lack sufficient data on problem,
    alternatives and criteria.
  • They have limited amount of working memory to
    store and process data.
  • Yet, they make decisions using heuristics

5
Heuristics
  • A heuristic is a mental short-cut in judgment
    and decision making
  • They are essential for living in an uncertain
    world
  • Rule of thumb
  • Mechanisms to cope with in a complex world
  • But can lead to faulty beliefs and suboptimal
    decisions

6
Example uses of heuristics
  • One negative comment outweighs many positive
    comments (e.g. Online purchases)
  • Information from direct perception given more
    importance than secondary data that has greater
    evidential value (my impressions of India)
  • Case histories and anecdotes have greater impact
    than more informative abstract statistical data
    (e.g. Mitsubishi Montero safety tests)

7
Availability Heuristic
  • What is readily available in memory influences
    the peoples judgments
  • Which is more harmful health?
  • Speeding?
  • Smoking?
  • Peoples choice may be influenced by
  • Their closeness of victims of either
  • Vividness of their experience in dealing with
    either
  • People tend to make judgments using
    retrievability of information

8
Problem 1
  • The following 10 corporations were ranked by
    Fortune magazine to be among the largest 500
    US-based firms according to sales revenue for
    2003
  • Group A Reebok Intl, Hilton Hotels, Starbucks,
    RadioShack, Hershey Foods
  • Group B CoconoPhillips, American International
    Group, McKesson, Amerisource Bergen, The Altria
    Group
  • Which group of companies has the largest total
    sales revenue?

9
Your answer to Problem 1
  • Correct answer Group B
  • You chose Group A, because of familiarity of the
    names of companies in Group A
  • Availability heuristic and resulting bias

10
Problem 2
  • In four pages of a novel (about 2000) words, how
    many words would you expect to find the form _ _
    _ _ ing (seven-letter words that end with ing)?
  • Choices 0 1-2 3-4 5-7 8-10 11-15 16

11
Problem 2 (contd)
  • In four pages of a novel (about 2000) words, how
    many words would you expect to find the form _ _
    _ _ _ n _ (seven-letter words with n in the sixth
    position)?
  • Choices 0 1-2 3-4 5-7 8-10 11-15 16

12
Retrievability
  • Did you respond with higher number for Problem 2a
    than for 2b?
  • Retrievability of 7-letter words ending with
    ing apparently easier than 7-letter words with
    n as the 6th letter.
  • Retrievability is exploited by business
  • Upscale retailers in the same mall
  • Multiple gas-stations at an intersection
  • Pharmacists in the same intersection (12th Street
    and Main)

13
Problem 3
  • How would you respond to Is marijuana use
    related to delinquency?
  • Typically, people start by recalling marijuana
    users who are delinquent
  • Correct way to make a judgment is to use four
    sets of people

14
Problem 4
  • Mark is finishing his MBA at a prestigious
    university. He is very interested in the arts
    and at one time considered a career as a
    musician. Where is he more likely to take a job?
  • In arts management
  • With a consulting firm

15
Problem 4
  • Did you choose A?
  • Your image of an arts management person might
    have influenced your decision
  • You forgot the base-rate
  • Proportionately more MBAs work for consulting
    firms than Arts management

16
Problem 5
  • You have started buying stocks on the Internet,
    beginning with five different stocks. Each stock
    goes down soon after you purchase. As you
    prepare to make a sixth purchase, you reason that
    it should be more successful, since the last five
    were lemons. After all, the odds favor making
    at least one successful pick in six decisions.
    This thinking is
  • Correct
  • Incorrect

17
Problem 5
  • Answer Incorrect
  • Performance of 6th stock is independent of the
    performance of other five stocks
  • Gamblers fallacy
  • Perceives higher chance of winning after a long
    streak of losses

18
Are people rational?
  • Decision makers forego best solution in favor of
    one that is acceptable or reasonable. They
    satisfice
  • People often lack sufficient data on problem,
    alternatives and criteria.
  • They have limited amount of working memory to
    store and process data.
  • Yet, they make decisions using heuristics

19
How to make decisions
  • Herb Simon (1916 2001)
  • Researcher in cognitive psychology, computer
    science, public administration, economics and
    philosophy
  • Won Nobel price for economics in 1978 for his
    work on decision-making in organizations

20
Simons 3-stage model
  • Intelligence
  • Design
  • Choice

21
Stage 1 - Intelligence
  • Gathering intelligence about the decision problem
  • Requirements gathering and analyzing requirements
  • E.g. Wanting a solution to transport problem

22
Stage 2 - Design
  • Create solutions
  • Must have more than one alternative solutions
  • Find or create or develop alternatives
  • E.g. What choices do we have for solving the
    transportation problem?

23
Stage 3 - Choice
  • Consider the alternatives and their attributes
    and make a choice
  • Select a choice or alternative for implementation
  • Eg. How to choose between various alternatives?

24
Evaluating decisions
  • Is the problem solved?
  • Are the objectives achieved?
  • Is the solution acceptable by the users?
  • Is there no conflict of interest?
  • Do users perceive usefulness of the solution?
  • Do the users use the solution?

25
Managerial Decisions
  • The decision can be classified based on the level
    of the organization
  • Decisions can be classified based on the context
    of the decision

26
Decisions categorized by Levels within an
organization
27
Operational performance decisions
Day-to-day decisions
28
Operational control decisions
Related to effectiveness of Operations
monitoring and Correcting deviations
29
Management control decisions
Decisions related to allocation of resources
analyzing buyer and supplier behavior
30
Strategic planning decisions
Establishing broad policiesEvaluating investment
proposals
31
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