The Seasoned Executive's Decision - Making Style



Posted: Wednesday, April 25, 2007

by
CJPS Enterprises

Our in-depth research into the reasons behind executive success and failure confirms just how consistently decision-making styles change over the course of successful executive's careers. We scoured a database of more than 120,000 people to identify the decision-making qualities and behaviors associated with executive success and found that good managers' decision styles evolve in a predictable pattern. Fortunately, struggling managers can often get back on track just by recognizing that they've failed to let go of old habits or that they've jumped too quickly into executive mode.

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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