Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

B301B: MAKING SENSE OF STRATEGY Block 3: UNITS Unit 6: section 6.2 pages (283-294) Note: These slides will cover most of the main ideas discussed in the.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "B301B: MAKING SENSE OF STRATEGY Block 3: UNITS Unit 6: section 6.2 pages (283-294) Note: These slides will cover most of the main ideas discussed in the."— Presentation transcript:

1 B301B: MAKING SENSE OF STRATEGY Block 3: UNITS Unit 6: section 6.2 pages (283-294) Note: These slides will cover most of the main ideas discussed in the above mentioned sections, but it is the student’s responsibility to do the following activities (6.11, 6.12).

2 6.2: A psychological approach to decision Making  In this section you are going to consider how our psychological make- up affects decision making, to what extent we should trust our instincts, and what traps may exist for the unwary as they make strategic decisions. Intuition:  Gut decisions are made in moments of crisis when there is no time to weigh arguments and calculate the probability of every outcome.  They are made in situations where there is no precedent and consequently little evidence.  Sometimes they are made in defiance of the evidence, as when Howard Schultz [founder of Starbucks] bucked conventional wisdom about Americans’ thirst for a $3 cup of coffee.  The act of strategic decision making is both science and art; learning to trust a feeling, a hunch, an intuition, is an intrinsic part of decision making.

3 The cognitive approach:  With the exception of the sense-making model, so far our approach to information has generally treated it as neutral – it offers details from which we can select alternatives.  However, there is a significant body of research demonstrating that the way we interact, interpret and receive information is somewhat more complex than meets the eye.  It seems, therefore, that the way in which choices and information are presented alters the decision made.  Indeed, how we process information and make decisions depends upon the interaction between how the information presented frames the problem and how we process it in our minds. (activity 6.11)

4 Emotions and decision making:  There is, however, another approach that suggests that our emotional state at the time of a decision, along with our general emotional demeanour, affects the content of decisions.  We may explain poor decisions by reference to emotional states; we may say that we were tired under stress, angry.  Recent research has suggested that not only that emotions are part of the decision-making process but also their impact is not always negative.


Download ppt "B301B: MAKING SENSE OF STRATEGY Block 3: UNITS Unit 6: section 6.2 pages (283-294) Note: These slides will cover most of the main ideas discussed in the."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google