Why All Decisions Aren’t Created Equal

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Why All Decisions Aren’t Created Equal

This DATIS Blog Article, “Why All Decisions Aren’t Created Equal”, was originally posted by Kevin EikenberryLeadership & Learning with Kevin Eikenberry, on February 20th, 2017 and was reposted with permission.

Decision making is a perennial topic for leadership and employee training around the world. It is one of those skills that we all use every day, yet we know it is sometimes hard, and we could probably be better at it.

There are many tools and techniques that can be employed to help make decisions, especially the complex ones often required in organizational life, and those are worthy of exploration and learning.

Today though, we are going to step back and start not with decision making, but with the decisions themselves, and use that starting point to help us all make better decisions.

The starting point for our conversation is a distinction between types of decisions that I first read from Jeff Bezos in the Amazon Annual Report in 2016. (If there is a previous source, I am not aware – if you know of one, let me know and I will insert an update in this article.) Let’s start there . . .

Bezos defines the two types of decisions this way:

Type 1 decisions are not reversible, so they require much care when making them.

Type 2 decisions are like walking through a door — if you don’t like the decision, you can always go back.

But then he went on to describe the problem with not distinguishing decisions in this way:

As organizations get larger, there seems to be a tendency to use the heavy-weight Type 1 decision-making process on most decisions, including many Type 2 decisions. The end result of this is slowness, unthoughtful risk aversion, failure to experiment sufficiently, and consequently diminished invention. We’ll have to figure out how to fight that tendency.

And one-size-fits-all thinking will turn out to be only one of the pitfalls. We’ll work hard to avoid it… and any other large organization maladies we can identify.

Later he acknowledges the opposite challenge of taking Type 1 decisions too lightly:

The opposite situation is less interesting and there is undoubtedly some survivorship bias. Any companies that habitually use the light-weight Type 2 decision-making process to make Type 1 decisions go extinct before they get large.

Can you see by reading this, that if a company is willing to look at decisions this way, they will take more risks, and move faster on the Type 2 decisions?

Does that sound like Amazon to you?

I believe this is a powerful distinction that, when intentionally added to your thought process, can aid in better and more effective decision-making.

Here is a three-step checklist to help you use this distinction effectively.

  1. Determine what type of decision it is first.
  2. If Type 1, dive in deep.
  3. If Type 2, get started.

Once you do step one, you can decide what types of tools you need to use to tackle the decision itself. In my experience, most of the decisions we face are of the Type 2 variety. If this is the case (or even when this is the case), this gives us the freedom to move faster, take a bit more risk, allow for “failure.”

Perhaps even more important, if we as a leader, or by extension our teams, can identify a decision as Type 2, more ownership can be granted to the team, and more delegation can likely happen from the leader.

Decision making is important and can be challenging. When you consider the distinction shared here first, you can make your decision making process more effective, whatever tools and techniques you choose to use.

The post Why All Decisions Aren’t Created Equal appeared first on DATIS HR Cloud.

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