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Decision-making4Biz
You'll make or break your business
by your decisions
Tips to Enhance Your Decision Making
Just as people are different, so are
their styles of decision making. Below are tips to enhance
your decision making abilities:
- When making a decision you are simply choosing from among
alternatives. You are not making a choice between right
and wrong.
- Avoid snap decisions. Move fast on the reversible ones
and slowly on the non-reversible.
- Choosing the right alternative at the wrong time is not
any better than the wrong alternative at the right time,
so make the decision while you still have time.
- Do your decision making on paper. Make notes and keep
your ideas visible so you can consider all the relevant
information in making this decision.
- Be sure to choose based on what is right, not who is right.
- Write down the pros and cons of the action you will take.
It clarifies your thinking and makes for a better decision.
- Make decisions as you go along. Do not let them accumulate.
A backlog of many little decisions could be harder to deal
with than one big and complex decision.
- Consider those affected by your decision. Whenever feasible,
get them involved to increase their commitment.
- Recognize that you cannot know with 100% certainty that
your decision is correct because the actions to implement
it are to take place in the future. So make it and don't
worry about it.
- Remember that not making a decision is a decision not
to take action.
- To be effective a manager must have the luxury of having
the right to be wrong.
- Trust yourself to make a decision and then to be able
to field the consequences appropriately.
- Don't waste your time making decisions that do not have
to be made.
- Determine alternative courses of action before gathering
data.
- Before implementing what appears to be the best choice,
assess the risk by asking "What can I think of that
might go wrong with this alternative ?"
- Many decisions you make are unimportant-about 80% of them.
Establish operating limits and let your secretary or others
make them for you.
- Consider making the decision yourself in lieu of a group,
but recognize the potential for less commitment by those
affected.
- As part of your decision making process, always consider
how the decision is to be implemented.
- As soon as you are aware that a decision will have to
be made on a specific situation, review the facts at hand
then set it aside. Let this incubate in your subconscious
mind until it is time to finally make the decision.
- Once the decision has been made, don't look back. Be aware
of how it is currently affecting you and focus on your next
move. Never regret a decision. It was the right thing to
do at the time. Now focus on what is right at this time.
- Mentally rehearse implementation of your choice and reflect
in your imagination what outcomes will result.
- Brainstorming alternative solutions with your staff or
others will gain fresh ideas and commitment.
- Discontinue prolonged deliberation about your decision.
Make it and carry it through.
- Once you have made the decision and have started what
you are going to do, put the "what if's" aside
and do it with commitment.
- Do not make decisions that are not yours to make.
See Biz Resources
and the Getting Started area
for more tips, advice, and information.
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