The 60 Second Leader Development system Click here to return to the homepage
PhilDourado.com - click here to go to the homepage

Phil who?
CV/Resume
What's on my wall?

Contact Phil DouradoContact me

Hub TV

Join mailing list
Email:  

Tips and insights on leadership, management, customers

The 60 Second Leader™
The book
The learning system

Books
Seven Secrets
Living with Huntington's
The 60 Second Leader™
The Little Book of Leadership

Work with me
Leadership development
Customer focus
Email newsletters
Speaking
Columnist

Some of my work
Corporate Publications
Newspapers & Magazines
Web & Journal Editing

People I like
Anita Roddick
Ricardo Semler
Kjell Nordstrom
Aidan Halligan
Shaun Smith
Marion Janner
Rene Carayol
Happy Henry
Peter Fisk
Chris Daffy
Robert Levering
Gerry Farrelly
Ron Kaufman

Working with

ECMW

NACCM

Leaders in London

Book Reviews

New Leaders

The New Leaders:
Daniel Goleman et al
(Titled Primal Leadership in the US)


For Phil's reviews of this and other books click here.

Site Design by Brom Sulaiman

Phil's Leadership Blog

Leaders in London


25 September 2008

 

How to make better decisions


Over at Slacker Manager, Phil Gerbyshak has been blogging about how to improve decision-making. As we are in a less forgiving economic environment, it's all the more important that your decisions as a leader are mostly right. So, here are a few quick 'sources of power' on making better decisions:

1. Don't assume the best decisions come from you. 'The leader as decision-maker' who answers everyone's questions and makes the final decision at the end of every meeting, is old hat and based on the outdated notion of the infallibility of leaders.

2. Gary Klein's book Sources of Power, despite its title, isn't about power, but is actually about decision-making. It's a powerful analysis of decision-making by people in life or death situations - firefighters, soldiers, doctors - and the techniques (often sub-conscious) they use. Klein experimented with getting a bunch of marines to work in a trading pit, applying the military's decision-making system for battlefield situations. The trader who were also part of the experiment trounced them. No surprise there. However, when he took the same traders and the same marines and put them in a war game exercise...the traders trounced the marines again. Their use of 80% information plus instinct in a fast-moving situation beat the military's need (at the time: they've learnt since) for 100% information before making a decision.

3. Take your time when you can. Yes, I chose the 'trader' example in 2., on purpose. The turmoil in the financial markets shows that what looks like great, fast decision-making - if you've been in the bearpit of a trading floor, you'll know how fast and furious it is - can, when scaled up and cumulatively, be disastrous for overall strategy. It can even de-stabilize the structure. So, our third and last thought on this subject comes from Rudy Giuliani, the former Mayor of New York, who is coming to share his leadership insights with us at Leaders in London in a couple of months (naked plug: book by tomorrow - Friday 26th - to save up to £500).

Giuliani advises us not to make decisions until you have to. The ability to reflect and ponder outcomes before acting is a sign of strength, not weakness, he stresses:
“One of the trickiest elements of decision-making is working out not what, but when. Regardless of how much time exists before a decision must be made, I never make up my mind until I have to. Faced with any important decision, I always envision how each alternative will play out before I make it. During this process, I’m not afraid to change my mind a few times. Many are tempted to decide an issue simply to end the discomfort of indecision. However, the longer you have to make a decision, the more mature and well-reasoned that decision should be.”

Labels: , , ,


Comments: Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link



<< Home

Archives

August 2006   September 2006   October 2006   November 2006   December 2006   January 2007   February 2007   March 2007   April 2007   May 2007   June 2007   July 2007   August 2007   September 2007   October 2007   November 2007   December 2007   January 2008   February 2008   March 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   August 2008   September 2008  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

The Leadership Race
The Leadership Race: click to see who wins

Read my blogs
Leadership Blog
Customer Blog

Interesting
Bring on the dinosaurs
Weird news
Evolution in action
A touch of irony
Virtual shrink
Phi & The Golden Ratio
Bubble wrap
Do not press
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Phil Dourado

Must read
How to change the world
Johnnie Moore

Tom Peters
Seth Godin
Bob Sutton
Jim Clemmer
The Laws of Simplicity

Must click
thehungersite.com

Get ATOM feed
Get RSS feed

Like Phil's blog? Click on one of the links above to receive alerts when a new post goes up or click here to learn more about site feeds.

 


Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 License.

Site Design by Brom Sulaiman

Return to homepage The Leadership Hub for Corporates brochure Leadership Blog Customer Blog What's on my wal 60 Second Leader Book The Leadership Hub March's FREE Chapter Seven Secrets of Inspired Leaders The 60 Second Leader The Little Book of Leadership Open Source Leadership Development The Leadership Hub Speaker Author Leadership Development Journalist