3 Decision-Making Techniques to Suit Any Purpose, Project, or Need
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Title: 3 Decision-Making Techniques to Suit Any Purpose, Project, or Need
Word Count: 751
Author: Adele Sommers
Email: adele@learnshareprosper.com
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3 Decision-Making Techniques to Suit Any Purpose, Project, or Need
Copyright 2005 Adele Sommers
Is there a secret to making stellar decisions? I'm talking
about a process that:
* Engages people in reaching satisfying, robust conclusions
* Guides thorny, complex problem-solving with relative ease
* Averts expensive project failures instead of causing them
Decisions made during problem-solving sessions are legacies
businesses often have to live with for a long time! Not
every decision requires special attention; many are simple
and routine. But the more risky, costly, or large-scale a
problem or project is, the more attention it requires. In
these instances, the aftereffects can come back to haunt
people who bypassed good decision-making procedures. This
article explains three ways to get superior results from
your decision-making processes.
Avoid "Mission Impossible"...
Remember the old saying: "If you fail to plan, you plan to
fail"? The quality of the decisions people make in group
settings determines the long-term benefits of those
decisions. Unfortunately, potent tools and techniques for
making complex decisions and solving tricky problems don't
seem to be widely understood.
Decision-making techniques are critical for managing
projects, for example, where they should be visible in
every aspect of project planning. Imagine an aerospace firm
that designs and builds highly complicated satellite
equipment. The potential exists for large-scale fiascos if
every facet of every phase doesn't come together perfectly!
Yet, for various reasons, decision-makers often feel
pressured to arrive at expedient outcomes when working on
urgent issues under tight deadlines. Sidestepping sound
decision-making techniques often occurs in the planning
stages "for the sake of the schedule." But rushing through
a project can easily backfire, and actually cause it to go
over-budget and end much later than the original schedule
would have required.
You've probably noticed that the consequences of poor
decisions -- where people hurried to make a decision
without weighing all of the important issues -- can range
from annoying to catastrophic.
...And Turn It into "Mission Possible"!
If you'll recall in the "Mission Impossible" series, the
characters invented ingenious maneuvers and planned every
aspect of the project down to the most minute detail. Even
though it wasn't always obvious to us -- the viewers -- the
mission planners and implementers had to weigh the risks,
alternatives, and "what if" scenarios of every potential
outcome. All of these actions contribute to great decision
making.
The best decisions for difficult problems can withstand
future challenges because they use structured techniques.
These techniques help the participants generate
breakthrough ideas, jointly analyze risk, and weigh
alternatives. Intricate decisions made without them can
quickly fall apart and may even cause harm. So to arrive at
great group decisions, I rely on proven, highly adaptable
methods such as these:
1) A silent brainstorming process that leads to
breakthrough thinking with exceptionally good results. It
uses an affinity diagram.
Why is silent brainstorming useful? The process of
generating brand, new ideas naturally excites our filtering
mechanisms -- the ones that protest that we've already
"been there, done that," or that someone's new idea can't
work "because...". Silent brainstorming, on the other
hand, helps us get past those instinctive hurdles to expose
new frontiers that we might not have explored.
2) A handy problem-solving tool that helps people identify
underlying causes of challenging problems. It uses a root
cause diagram.
Why is getting at root causes necessary? Because too often,
we fail to look deeply enough at what's responsible for a
particular problem. There may be a whole series of nested
or interconnected reasons for orders not being filled
correctly, for example. The answer could be far simpler
than anyone thought, such as a faulty printer ribbon that
doesn't print orders clearly, rather than, say, a training
issue. We'd never know without asking "why" from several
angles and points of view.
3) A tidy decision-making technique that enables a group to
compare ideas and alternatives. It uses a prioritization
matrix.
Why is prioritizing valuable? It's one of the ways we can
best assess the relative merits of one idea over another,
especially when each has several complex components. Using
a tool with a built-in scoring system can coax the real
winner to emerge, clearly separating it from the "runner
ups."
In conclusion, structured decision-making produces sturdy,
satisfying results -- even for complex projects or problems
-- while boosting both morale and profit potential. For
more information on these methods, you may want to explore
the decision-making tools and guidebooks at
www.GoalQPC.com.
About the Author:
Adele Sommers, Ph.D. is the creator of the award-winning
"Straight Talk on Boosting Business Performance" success
program. To learn more about her tools and resources and
sign up for other free tips like these, visit her site at
LearnShareProsper.com.
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