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![]() Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Lesson
6.17
NATURE
AND TYPES OF MANAGERIAL
DECISIONS
Nature
of Managerial Decision-making:
The
situations in which managers have to
act differ according to the
types of problems that must
be
handled.
Programmed
decisions are
those made in routine,
repetitive, well-structured situations
through the use of
predetermined
decision rules.
Many
programmed decisions are derived
from established practices
and procedures or habit.
Computers are
an
ideal tool for dealing
with several kinds of complex programmed
decisions.
Most
of the decisions made by first-line
managers and many by middle
managers are
Programmed
decisions.
Non-programmed
decisions are
those for which predetermined
decision rules are
impractical because
the
situations
are novel and/or
ill-structured.
Types
of Problems and Decisions:
Managers
will be faced with different
types of problems and will
use different types of
decisions.
1.
Well-structured
problems are
straightforward, familiar, and easily
defined. In handling this
situation,
a manager can use a
programmed
decision, which is a
repetitive decision that can
be
handled
by a routine approach. There are
three possible programmed
decisions.
a.
A
procedure
is a
series of interrelated sequential steps
that can be used to respond
to a structured
problem.
b.
A
rule
is an
explicit statement that
tells managers what they ought or
ought not to do.
c.
A
policy
is a
guide that establishes
parameters for making decisions rather
than specifically stating
what
should or should not be done
2.
Poorly
structured problems are
new or unusual problems in
which information is ambiguous
or
incomplete.
These problems are best
handled by a non-programmed
decision that
is a unique
decision
that requires a custom-made
solution.
General
Organizational Situations:
a.
At
the higher levels of the organization, managers
are dealing with poorly
structured problems
and
using
non-programmed decisions.
b.
At
lower levels, managers are
dealing with well-structured problems by
using programmed
decisions.
Since
managers can make decisions
on the basis of rationality, bounded
rationality, or intuition, let us
try to
understand
them one by one:
1.
Assumptions
of Rationality.
Managerial
decision making is assumed to be
rational; that
is, choices that is
consistent and value
maximizing
within specified constraints.
The assumptions of rationality
are summarized below.
a.
These
assumptions are problem clarity (the
problem is clear and
unambiguous); goal orientation
(a
single,
well-defined goal is to be achieved);
known options (all alternatives
and consequences are
known);
clear preferences; constant
preferences (preferences are
constant and stable); no time
or
cost
constraints; and maximum pay
off.
b.
The
assumption of rationality is that
decisions are made in the
best economic interests of
the
organization,
not in
the manager's interests.
c.
The
assumptions of rationality can be
met if:
the
manager is faced with a
simple problem in
which
goals
are clear and alternatives
limited, in which time pressures
are minimal and the cost of
finding
and
evaluating alternatives is low, for
which the organizational culture supports
innovation and risk
taking,
and in which outcomes are
concrete and
measurable.
45
![]() Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
The
rational model is flawed in that it does
not apply to actual decision aiming
for two reasons.
a.
Perfect
information is not
available.
b.
Manager's
values and personality factors
enter into their
decisions.
The
rational model presents an ideal
against which actual
decision-making patterns can be
measured
Decision-Making
Styles
Managers
have different styles when
it comes to making decisions and solving
problems. One perspective
proposes
that people differ along two
dimensions in the way they approach
decision making.
1.
One
dimension is an individual's way of
thinking--rational or intuitive. The
other is the individual's
tolerance
for ambiguity--low or
high.
2.
These
two dimensions lead to a two
by two matrix with four
different decision-making
styles.
a.
The
directive
style is one
that's characterized by low
tolerance for ambiguity and a
rational way of
thinking.
b.
The
analytic
style is one
characterized by a high tolerance
for ambiguity and a rational
way of
thinking.
c.
The
conceptual
style is
characterized by an intuitive way of
thinking and a high
tolerance for
ambiguity.
d.
The
behavioral
style is one
characterized by a low tolerance
for ambiguity and an intuitive
way of
thinking.
3.
Most
managers realistically probably
have a dominant style and
alternate styles, with some
relying
almost
exclusively on their dominant
style and others being more
flexible depending on the
situation.
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