Decision-making models
as a term is a scientific process when that decision will affect a policy affecting an entity. Decision-making models are used as a method and process to fulfill the following objectives:
- Every team member is clear about how a decision will be made
- The roles and responsibilities for the decision making
- Who will own the process to make the final decision
Types
There are several models of decision-making:Economic rationality model
When using this model, the following conditions are assumed.- The decision will be completely rational in a means-ends sense
- There is a complete and consistent system of preferences that allows a choice among alternatives
- There is a complete awareness of all the possible alternatives
- Probability calculations are neither frightening nor mysterious
- There are no limits to the complexity of computations that can be performed to determine the best alternatives
Simon's bounded rationality model
To present a more realistic alternative to the economic rationality model, Herbert Simon proposed an alternative model. He felt that management decision-making behavior could be described as follows:- In choosing between alternatives, the manager attempts to satisfy or looks for the one which is satisfactory or “good enough”. Examples of satisfying criteria would be adequate profit or share or the market and fair price.
- They recognize that the world they perceive is a drastically simplified model of the real world. They are content with the simplification because they believe the real world is mostly empty anyway.
- Because they satisfy rather than maximize, they can make their choices without first determining all possible behavior alternatives and without ascertaining that these are all the alternatives.
- The managers treat the world as empty, they are able to make decisions with simple rules of thumb. These techniques do not make impossible demands upon their capacity for thought.
Neuroscientific (neurocognitive) model