The Seasoned Executive's Decision - Making Style
Posted: Wednesday, April 25, 2007
by Ann Knapp
CJPS Enterprises
New Research shows that senior managers analyze and act on problems far
differently than their more junior colleagues do. Those whose thinking
does not evolve may not advance.
The job of a manager is, above all, to make decisions. At any
moment in any day, most executives are engaged in some aspect of
decision making: exchanging information, reviewing data, coming up with
ideas, evaluating alternatives, implementing directives, following up.
But while managers at all levels must play the role of decision maker,
the way a successful manager approaches the decision-making process
changes as he or she moves up in the organization. At lower levels, the
job is to get widgets out the door (or, in the case of services, to
solve glitches on the spot). Action is at a premium. At higher levels,
the job involves making decisions about which widgets or services to
offer and how to develop them. To climb the corporate ladder and be
effective in new roles, managers need to learn new skills and behaviors
- to change the way they use information and the way they create and
evaluate options. In fact, we've seen in our executive coaching that
making decisions like a full-fledged senior executive too soon can hurl
an ambitious middle manager right off the fast track. It's just as
destructive to act like a first-line supervisor after being bumped up
to senior management.
Defining Decision Styles
Before we look at the patterns, it's helpful to define the decision styles. We have observed that decision styles differ in two fundamental ways: how information is used and how options are created. When it comes to information use, some people want to mull over reams of data before they make any decision. In the management literature, such people are called "maximizers." Maximizers can't rest until they are certain they've found the very best answer. The result is a well-informed decision, but it may come at a cost in terms of time and efficiency. Other managers just want the key facts - they're apt to leap to hypotheses and then test them as they go. Here, the literature borrows a term from behavioral economist Herbert Simon: "Satisfiers" are ready to act as soon as they have enough information to satisfy their requirements.
As for creating options, "single focus" decision makers strongly believe in taking one course of action, while their "multifocused" counterparts generate lists of possible options and may pursue multiple courses. Single-focus people put their energy into making things come out as they believe they should, multifocus people into adapting to circumstances.
"The Seasoned Executive's Decision-Making Style?", Kenneth R. Brousseau, Michael J. Driver, Gary Hourihan, an d Rikard Larsson, Harvard Business Review, February 2006.
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