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Decision making and creativity

Chapter 7. Decision making and creativity. Learning Objectives. 7.1 Describe the rational choice paradigm 7.2 Explain why people differ from the rational choice paradigm when identifying problems/opportunities, evaluating/choosing alternatives and evaluating decision outcomes

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Decision making and creativity

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  1. Chapter 7 Decision making and creativity

  2. Learning Objectives 7.1 Describe the rational choice paradigm 7.2 Explain why people differ from the rational choice paradigm when identifying problems/opportunities, evaluating/choosing alternatives and evaluating decision outcomes 7.3 Discuss the roles of emotions and intuition in decision making 7.4 Describe employee characteristics, workplace conditions and specific activities that support creativity 7.5 Describe the benefits of employee involvement and identify four contingencies that affect the optimal level of employee involvement

  3. Decision Making at HP At HP technicians moved from being problem solvers to having the autonomy to embrace entrepreneurialism in customer service. Through training, the company developed the technicians’ enthusiasm, ability and skills, resulting in happy costumers and employees

  4. Decision Making Defined Decision making is a conscious process of making choices among one or more alternatives, with the intention of moving toward some desired state of affairs

  5. Rational Choice Paradigm • Rational choice paradigm: effective decision makers identify, select and apply the best possible alternative • Two key elements of rational choice • Subjective expected utility: determines choice with highest value (maximisation) • Decision-making process: systematic application of stages of decision making

  6. Subjective Expected Utility Estimating the best possible alternative (maximisation) Expected—probability of an outcome occurring • E.g. chance that outcome 3 will occur is 90% if choice ‘A’ is chosen, 30% if choice ‘B’ is chosen Utility—value or happiness produced by each option from value of expected outcomes • Choice ‘B’ has higher utility (value) than choice ‘A’ • Choice ‘B’ expected utility is(0.8×7)+(0.2×–2)+(0.3×1)=6.4 0.2 Outcome 1 (+7) Choice A 0.5 Outcome 2 (-2) 0.9 Outcome 3 (+1) Outcome 1 (+7) 0.8 Choice B 0.2 Outcome 2 (-2) 0.3 Outcome 3 (+1) Probability of outcome occurring Utility (expected happiness)

  7. Rational Choice Decision Process

  8. Rational Choice Decision Process • Identify problem or opportunity • Symptom vs problem • Choose decision process • E.g. (non) programmed • Develop/identify alternatives • Search, then develop • Choose best alternative • Subjective expected utility • Implement choice • Evaluate choice

  9. Problems with the Rational Choice Paradigm • The model assumes that people are efficient and logical information-processing machines • In reality, people have difficulty recognising problems and failures and cannot simultaneously process huge volumes of information • The model focuses on logical thinking and completely ignores emotions

  10. Identifying Problems and Opportunities • Stakeholder framing • Mental models • Decisive leadership • Solution-focused problems • Perceptual defence

  11. Identifying Problems and Opportunities Effectively • Be aware of perceptual and diagnostic limitations • Fight against pressure to look decisive • Maintain ‘divine discontent’ (aversion to complacency) • Discuss the situation with colleagues—see different perspectives

  12. Making Choices: Rational vs OB Views Rational choice paradigm assumptions Observations from organisational behaviour Goals are ambiguous, conflicting and lack agreement People have limited information processing abilities People evaluate alternatives sequentially Goals are clear, compatible and agreed upon People are able to calculate all alternatives and their outcomes People evaluate all alternatives simultaneously

  13. Making Choices: Rational vs OB Views continued Rational choice paradigm assumptions Observations from organisational behaviour People use absolute standards to evaluate alternatives People make choices using factual information People choose the alternative with the highest payoff (SEU) People evaluate alternatives against an implicit favourite People choose the alternative that is good enough (satisficing) People make choices using perceptually distorted information

  14. Biased Decision Heuristics People have built-in decision heuristics that bias evaluation of alternatives • Anchoring and adjustment—initial information (e.g. opening bid) influences evaluation of subsequent information • Availability heuristic—we estimate probabilities by how easily we can recall the event, even though other factors influence ease of recall • Representativeness heuristic—we estimate probabilities by how much they are similar to something else (e.g. stereotypes) even when better information about probabilities is available

  15. Paralysed by Choice • Decision makers are less likely to make any decision at all as the number of options increases • Occurs even when there are clear benefits to selecting any alternative (such as joining a company retirement plan) • Evidence of human information processing limitations Courtesy of Microsoft

  16. Emotions and Making Choices • Emotions form preferences before we consciously evaluate those choices • Moods and emotions influence how well we follow the decision process • We ‘listen in’ on our emotions and use that information to make choices

  17. Intuitive Decision Making • Ability to know when a problem or opportunity exists and select the best course of action without conscious reasoning • Intuition as emotional experience • Gut feelings are emotional signals • Not all emotional signals are intuition • Intuition as rapid non-conscious analysis • Uses action scripts

  18. Making Choices More Effectively • Systematically evaluate alternatives against relevant factors • Be aware of effects of emotions on decision preferences and evaluation process • Scenario planning

  19. Implementing Decisions • Execution—translating decisions into action—is one of the most important and challenging tasks of leaders

  20. Evaluating Decision Outcomes • Post-decisional justification is the tendency to inflate the quality of the selected option, and forget or downplay rejected alternatives • Caused by need to maintain a positive self-concept • Initially produces excessively optimistic evaluation of decision

  21. Escalation of Commitment • The tendency to repeat an apparently bad decision or allocate more resources to a failing course of action • Four main causes of escalation: • Self-justification • Prospect theory effect • Perceptual blinders • Closing costs

  22. Evaluating Decisions More Effectively • Separate decision choosers from evaluators • Establish a preset level to abandon the project • Find sources of systematic and clear feedback • Involve several people in the evaluation process

  23. Creativity at Google Google encourages its engineers to use 20% of their time to develop projects of their choosing The company initially allocates limited resources to initiatives, then assigns more people and budget to projects that show progress and viability, like Google Maps

  24. Creativity Defined • Developing an original idea that makes a socially recognised contribution • Applies to all aspects of the decision process—problems, alternatives, solutions

  25. Creativity

  26. Characteristics of Creative People

  27. Organisational Conditions Supporting Creativity • Learning orientation in the organisation • Forgiveness for mistakes • Creating intrinsically motivating jobs • Open communication and sufficient resources • A reasonable level of job security • Support from leaders and co-workers

  28. Creative Work Environments • Learning orientation • Encourage experimentation • Tolerate mistakes • Intrinsically motivating work • Task significance, autonomy, feedback • Open communication and sufficient resources • Unclear/complex effects of team competition and time pressure on creativity

  29. Redefinethe problem Associative play Cross-pollination • Review abandoned projects • • Explore issue with other people • Diverse teams • Information sessions • Internal tradeshows • Storytelling • Artistic activities • Morphological analysis Creative Activities

  30. Double Circle Problem

  31. Nine Dot Problem

  32. Nine Dot Problem Revisited

  33. Word Search FCIRVEEALTETITVEERS

  34. Burning Ropes After first rope burned i.e. 30 min. One Hour to Burn Completely

  35. Employee Involvement Defined • The degree to which employees influence how their work is organised and carried out • Different levels and forms of involvement: • Decide alone • Receive information from individuals • Consult with individuals • Consult with the team • Facilitate the team’s decision

  36. Employee Involvement Model

  37. Contingencies of Involvement Higher employee involvement is better when: Decision structure • Problem is new and complex(i.e. Non-programmed decision) Knowledge source • Employees have relevant knowledge beyond leader Decision commitment • Employees would lack commitment unless involved Risk ofconflict Norms support firm’s goals Employee agreement likely

  38. Summary • The rational choice paradigm relies on subjective expected utility to identify the best choice, but it has limitations • Emotions and intuition also have an important role, not just our rational decision-making • Creativity is the development of original ideas that make a socially recognised contribution. The four creativity stages are preparation, incubation, insight and verification • In the right conditions, employee involvement can contribute greatly to the decision-making process, as well as to the employees and the organisation

  39. Chapter 7 Decision making and creativity

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