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The Decision Making Process Harrison, Ch. 2 Fred Wenstøp
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2 Functions of Decision Making 1.Setting managerial objectives 2.Searching for alternatives 3.Predicting probable outcomes 4.Evaluating the alternatives 5.Comparing the alternatives 6.The act of choice 7.Implementing the decision 8.Follow-up and control
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Fred Wenstøp3 Structuring objectives with goal hierarchy Means-objective (mål-middel) diagram portray the causal relation between objectives and means We ask: How can the goal be achieved? They are typically diagrams, not hierarchies Because of our tendency to focus on actions, we are prone to structure values in terms of means-objective diagrams Goal-hierarchy Instead we should explain what our values are Ask: Why is this important What are the important aspects of the objectives? This breaks our objectives down into more concrete sub-objectives –eventually producing a set of decision criteria
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Fred Wenstøp4 Example: Means-objective diagram for traffic safety In principle, any box could be a top objective for a narrower decision context
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Fred Wenstøp5 Example: Goal Hierarchy for traffic safety
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Fred Wenstøp6 Decision frame Decision context (problemstilling) A certain situation that requires that something be done The set of decision alternatives Objectives The important values at stake in the current context Decision frame The context pluss the objectives Objectives Context ** ** ** * * * The frame: A kaleidoscope where you consider the alternatives in the light of the goals
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Fred Wenstøp7 Strategic and context depended objectives Strategic Objectives Stategic Context ** ** ** * * * Spesific context * * * * * Context dependent objectives
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Fred Wenstøp8 General properties for the set of objectives essential reflect the important issues that make the decision context interesting and explains why it is hard to choose complete all important aspects concerning the consequences must be incorporated concise use as few goals as possible non-overlapping do not double count possible consequences decomposable it is possible to evaluate one goal attainment without knowing the others controllable they include only aspects that can be influenced by the decision maker. Fair weather as a goal is not useful measurable we can measure rather precisely to which degree the goals are attained understandable it must be possible for the decision maker to judge upon the relative importance of the goals operational it must be possible to predict with reasonable accuracy and costs what the consequences of alternative actions will be
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Fred Wenstøp9 Managerial objectives (Harrison p. 44) Relevance Must fit with strategy Practicality Recognize obvious constraints Challenge Challenge for all managers Measurability Confuses scores and weights Scheduling Monitoring at interim points Balance Keep strength and weaknesses in balance Flexibility Do not lock development Timeliness The proper time for these objectives? State of the art Current technlogy? Growth Growth, not just survival Cost effectiveness Costs must be included Accountability Delegation of responsibility
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Fred Wenstøp10 Models of choice making Linear model The performance of an alternative is evaluated as a weighted sum of scores Conjunctive model It is important to score reasonably well on all criteria (overall utility a product of individual utilities) Disjunctive model It is important to score well on some criteria (over all utility equals the maximum of the individual utilities) Lexicographic
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