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Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 1 Chapter 5 Planning and Decision Making Designed & Prepared by B-books, Ltd. MGMT3 Chuck Williams.

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Presentation on theme: "Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 1 Chapter 5 Planning and Decision Making Designed & Prepared by B-books, Ltd. MGMT3 Chuck Williams."— Presentation transcript:

1 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 1 Chapter 5 Planning and Decision Making Designed & Prepared by B-books, Ltd. MGMT3 Chuck Williams

2 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 2 Planning After reading these sections, you should be able to: 1.discuss the benefits and pitfalls of planning. 2.describe how to make a plan that works. 3.discuss how companies can use plans at all management levels, from top to bottom.

3 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 3 Planning Choosing a goal and developing a method of strategy to achieve that goal 1 1

4 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 4 Benefits of Planning Creation of Task Strategies Creation of Task Strategies Intensified Effort Direction Persistence 1.1

5 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 5 Pitfalls of Planning Detachment of Planners Impedes Change and Adaptation False Sense of Certainty 1.2

6 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 6 How to Make a Plan That Works Set Goals Develop Commitment Develop Effective Action Plans Develop Effective Action Plans Track Progress Toward Goal Achievement Track Progress Toward Goal Achievement Maintain Flexibility Revise existing plan or Begin new planning process 2 2

7 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 7 S.M.A.R.T.S.M.A.R.T. Specific Measurable Attainable Realistic Timely Setting Goals 2.1

8 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 8 Examples of S.M.A.R.T. Goals? Walgreens : “Second is to hire a significant number of people with disabilities in our South Carolina distribution center, scheduled to open in 2007, and achieve 20% productivity gains there.” UPS : “65% of drivers will have access to the new technology (implemented in 2004) by the end of 2005.” and “In 2005, we will increase operating profit in each of our 3 key businesses: domestic, int’l, supply chain.” Wrigley : “In 2005, the company will decrease the long-term rate of return assumption for the assets of its U.S. (pension) plans from 8.75 % to 8.5%.” Halliburton : “We estimate that 74% of the backlog existing on 12/31 will be eliminated the following fiscal year.” Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia : “In 2004 we will discontinue the Catalog for Living and its online product options, and sell remaining inventory in early fiscal 2005.” Starbucks : “In fiscal 2006, we plan to open approximately 1,800 net new stores globally.”

9 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 9 Developing Commitment to Goals The determination to achieve a goal is increased by… –setting goals collectively. –making goals reasonable. –making goals public. –obtaining top management support. 2.2

10 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 10 Developing Effective Action Plans Specific Steps People Resources Time Period An Action Plan Lists… 2.3

11 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 11 Tracking Progress Set… Proximal Goals Distal Goals Gather and provide… Performance Feedback 2.4

12 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 12 Maintaining Flexibility Option-based planning –keep options open by making simultaneous investments invest more in promising options maintains slack resources 2.5

13 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 13 Planning or Doing? Beyond the Book Planning takes many hours and much effort, time and effort that could be spent doing something. Is time spent planning time lost? No. If planning involves predicting where an industry is going, and these predictions are merely guesses, as some managers think, what’s to be gained from planning? Time spent planning is time spent learning. Learning what? To get better and faster at predicting industry outcomes and setting standards. Source: “Planning Not to Learn,” Fast Company, available online at http://www.fastcompany.com/resources/columnists/vgct/052404.html.

14 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 14 Planning from Top to Bottom 3

15 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 15 Starting at the Top Strategic Plans Clarify how the company will serve customers and position itself against competitors (2-5 years) Purpose Statement Purpose Statement An inspirational statement of an organization’s purpose (2 sentences) Strategic Objective Strategic Objective Overall goal that unifies efforts, stretches and challenges, and possesses a finish line and time frame. Flows from purpose. Overall goal that unifies efforts, stretches and challenges, and possesses a finish line and time frame. Flows from purpose. 3.1

16 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 16 Planning Time Lines Years 0123456 Plans Strategic Tactical Operational 5 Years 2 years 30 days 6 months 2 Years

17 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 17 Bending in the Middle Tactical Plans Specify how a company will use resources, budgets, and people to accomplish goals related to its strategic objective. Specify how a company will use resources, budgets, and people to accomplish goals related to its strategic objective. Management by Objectives Develop and carry out tactical plans MBO is a four-step process 3.2

18 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 18 Management by Objectives Steps to Management by Objectives: 1.Discuss possible goals 2.Select goals that are challenging, attainable and consistent with the company’s overall goals 3.Jointly develop tactical plans that lead to the accomplishment of tactical goals and objectives 4.Meet regularly to review progress

19 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 19 Finishing at the Bottom Operational Plans Day-to-day plans for producing or delivering products and services over a period of 30 days to 6 months 3.3

20 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 20 Kinds of Operational Plans Single-Use Plans Plans that cover unique, one-time-only events Standing Plans Plans used repeatedly to handle frequently recurring events. Three kinds are: policies, procedures, and rules and regulations. Plans used repeatedly to handle frequently recurring events. Three kinds are: policies, procedures, and rules and regulations. Budgets Quantitative planning to decide how to allocate money to accomplish company goals 3.3

21 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 21 What Is Rational Decision Making? After reading these sections, you should be able to: 4.explain the steps and limits to rational decision making. 5.explain how group decisions and group decision-making techniques can improve decision-making.

22 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 22 What Is Rational Decision Making? Decision Making The process of choosing a solution from available alternatives. Rational Decision Making A systematic process of defining problems, evaluating alternatives, and choosing optimal solutions. 4 4

23 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 23 Steps to Rational Decision Making Define the problem Identify decision criteria Weight the criteria Generate alternative courses of action Evaluate each alternative Compute the optimal decision 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 4 4

24 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 24 Beyond the Book Starting From Scratch When making a decision, sometimes it’s ok to start over or change direction. Mattel was struggling financially when Bob Eckert first became CEO. They’d been paying a 36¢ per share dividend for several years, but they had started having to borrow from banks to continue the payout. Eckert and his CFO realized that given a blank slate, they wouldn’t be paying the dividend, so they decided to cut it to 5¢. The day that they announced the cut, the stock price actually went up. Source: B. Eckert, “The Best Advice I Ever Got: Try Starting From Scratch”, Fortune, 31 August 2009. 20.

25 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 25 Steps to Rational Decision Making Define the problem 1 1 A problem exists when there is a gap between a desired state and an existing state To make decisions about problems, managers must… –be aware of the gap. –be motivated to reduce the gap. –have the knowledge, skills, abilities, and resources to fix the problem. 4.1

26 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 26 Steps to Rational Decision Making Identify decision criteria 2 2 Standards used to guide judgments and decisions The more criteria a potential solution meets, the better that solution should be 4.2

27 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 27 Steps to Rational Decision Making Weight the criteria 3 3 Absolute comparisons –each criterion is compared to a standard or ranked on its own merits Relative comparisons –each criterion is compared directly to every other criterion 4.3

28 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 28 Steps to Rational Decision Making Absolute Weighting of Decision Criteria for a Car Purchase Absolute Weighting of Decision Criteria for a Car Purchase 4.3

29 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 29 Steps to Rational Decision Making Relative Comparison of Home Characteristics 4.3

30 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 30 Steps to Rational Decision Making Generate alternative courses of action 4 4 The idea is to generate as many alternatives as possible 4.4

31 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 31 Beyond the Book Buck Knives Considers Its Options In 2004, C.J. Buck moved his company Buck Knives from its 62 year-old headquarters in San Diego, California to Post Falls, Idaho. As its clients had shifted from small specialty stores to larger accounts like Wal-Mart and JCPenney, order volumes had risen but price competition was hurting margins. Buck concluded they could move assembly to Mexico, become a marketing company and outsource all production, or move the company. To maintain the integrity of the brand and maintain quality control, Buck wanted to keep production close to the headquarters. Buck chose to move because Idaho provided a more business friendly environment. Source: B. Eckert, “The Best Advice I Ever Got: Try Starting From Scratch”, Fortune, 31 August 2009. 20.

32 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 32 Evaluate each alternative 5 5 Steps to Rational Decision Making This step can take much longer and be more expensive than other steps in the process 4.5

33 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 33 Compute the optimal decision 6 6 Steps to Rational Decision Making Multiply the rating for each criterion by the weight for that criterion Sum the scores for each alternative course of action 4.6

34 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 34 Limits to Rational Decision Making Maximize Satisfice 4.7

35 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 35 Using Groups to Improve Decision Making Delphi Technique Delphi Technique Electronic Brainstorming Structured Conflict Nominal Group Technique 5 5

36 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 36 Group Decision Making 1.View problems from multiple perspectives 2.Find and access more information 3.Generate more alternative solutions 4.More committed to making chosen solutions work 1.View problems from multiple perspectives 2.Find and access more information 3.Generate more alternative solutions 4.More committed to making chosen solutions work Advantages 5.1

37 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 37 Group Decision Making 1.Susceptible to groupthink and to considering a limited number of solutions 2.Takes considerable time 3.One or two people can dominate group discussion 4.Members don’t feel personally accountable for decisions and actions 1.Susceptible to groupthink and to considering a limited number of solutions 2.Takes considerable time 3.One or two people can dominate group discussion 4.Members don’t feel personally accountable for decisions and actions Disadvantages 5.1

38 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 38 Groupthink  the group is insulated from others with different perspectives.  the group leader expresses a strong preference for a particular decision.  there is no established procedure for defining problems and exploring alternatives.  group members have similar backgrounds.  the group is insulated from others with different perspectives.  the group leader expresses a strong preference for a particular decision.  there is no established procedure for defining problems and exploring alternatives.  group members have similar backgrounds. Groupthink is likely to occur when… 5.1

39 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 39 Structured Conflict C-Type Conflict Cognitive conflict Disagreement that focuses on problem- and issue-related differences of opinion A-Type Conflict Affective conflict Disagreement that focuses on individuals or personal issues Affective conflict Disagreement that focuses on individuals or personal issues 5.2

40 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 40 Devil’s Advocacy Steps to Establish a Devil’s Advocacy Program 1.Generate a potential solution 2.Assign a devil’s advocate to criticize and question 3.Present the critique of the solution to key decision makers 4.Gather additional information 5.Decide whether to use, change, or not use the originally proposed solution 1.Generate a potential solution 2.Assign a devil’s advocate to criticize and question 3.Present the critique of the solution to key decision makers 4.Gather additional information 5.Decide whether to use, change, or not use the originally proposed solution 5.2

41 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 41 Dialectical Inquiry Steps to Establish a Dialectical Inquiry Process 1.Generate a potential solution 2.Identify the assumptions underlying the potential solution 3.Generate a conflicting counterproposal based on opposite assumptions 4.Have advocates of each position present their arguments and engage in a debate in front of decision makers 5.Decide whether to use, change, or not use the originally proposed solution 1.Generate a potential solution 2.Identify the assumptions underlying the potential solution 3.Generate a conflicting counterproposal based on opposite assumptions 4.Have advocates of each position present their arguments and engage in a debate in front of decision makers 5.Decide whether to use, change, or not use the originally proposed solution Beyond the Book

42 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 42 Nominal Group Technique Steps to Establish Nominal Group Technique 1.During a quiet time, group members write down as many problems and solutions as possible. 2.Each member shares one idea at a time. 3.Ideas are posted on flipcharts until all ideas are shared. 4.Group discusses advantages/disadvantages. 5.Ideas are ranked during a second quiet time. 6.Members read rankings aloud, and the idea with the highest average rank is selected. 1.During a quiet time, group members write down as many problems and solutions as possible. 2.Each member shares one idea at a time. 3.Ideas are posted on flipcharts until all ideas are shared. 4.Group discusses advantages/disadvantages. 5.Ideas are ranked during a second quiet time. 6.Members read rankings aloud, and the idea with the highest average rank is selected. 5.3

43 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 43 Delphi Technique Steps to Establish Delphi Technique 1.Assemble a panel of experts. 2.Create a questionnaire of open-ended questions. 3.Summarize the responses and feed back to the panel until the members reach agreement. 4.Create a brief report and send to the panel members for agreement/disagreement. 5.Continue the feedback process until panel reaches agreement. 1.Assemble a panel of experts. 2.Create a questionnaire of open-ended questions. 3.Summarize the responses and feed back to the panel until the members reach agreement. 4.Create a brief report and send to the panel members for agreement/disagreement. 5.Continue the feedback process until panel reaches agreement. 5.4

44 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 44 Stepladder Technique Member 1 Shares thoughts, ideas, recommendations Member 2 Shares thoughts, ideas, recommendations Discussion is Held and Tentative Group Decision is Made Member 3 Joins Group Shares thoughts, ideas, recommendations Members 1 & 2 Share previous thoughts, ideas, recommendations Discussion is Held and Tentative Group Decision is Made Member 4 Joins Group Shares thoughts, ideas, recommendations Members 1, 2, & 3 Share previous thoughts, ideas, recommendations Discussion is Held and Tentative Group Decision is Made Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Beyond the Book

45 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 45 Brainstorming Four Rules of Brainstorming 1.The more ideas, the better. 2.All ideas are acceptable, no matter how wild or crazy. 3.Other group members’ ideas should be used to come up with even more ideas. 4.Criticism or evaluation of ideas is not allowed. 1.The more ideas, the better. 2.All ideas are acceptable, no matter how wild or crazy. 3.Other group members’ ideas should be used to come up with even more ideas. 4.Criticism or evaluation of ideas is not allowed. 5.5

46 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 46 Electronic Brainstorming Advantages of Electronic Brainstorming Overcomes production blocking technology allows everyone to record their ideas as they are created no ideas lost while waiting your turn to speak Overcomes evaluation apprehension anonymity creates free expression 5.5

47 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 47 Electronic Brainstorming Disadvantages of Electronic Brainstorming Greater expense No automatic acceptance of ideas because of one’s position Some find it difficult to express themselves in writing Lack of typing skills can frustrate participants 5.5

48 Copyright ©2011 by Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 48 Beyond the Book Brainstorming: Up-close and Personal Some organizations are trying some radical methods for generating new ideas. In 2008, Best Buy took four groups of younger sales people and asked them to live together for 10 weeks. Their goal for the period was to brainstorm and develop new businesses that could be launched quickly and cheaply. Their efforts produced Best Buy Studio, a service providing Web-design consulting for small businesses. Source: R. Jana, “Real Life Imitates Real World”, Business Week, 23 & 30 March 2009. 42.


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