Top management teams often find it difficult to agree on a course of action for their firm. Whenever we participate in firm strategy retreats, we see managers grappling with collective decisions. After weeding out inferior strategic alternatives, they are left with a set of promising but mutually exclusive options, and often struggle to make a call. Because it’s unrealistic for every manager to agree on a single option, the more relevant question is how many need to agree before a strategic decision is made.
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When organizations set a high threshold for approving a project—such that almost all managers must be in agreement—it’s clear that few projects will move ahead. To encourage more investments, organizations may modify their decision-making rules, lowering the threshold required to approve new projects.
Although this appears logical, this structural change may fail to bear fruit. Our research reveals that lowering the bar in the hopes of making it easier for projects to get the go-ahead can have unintended consequences. When less consensus is needed, the more an individual’s support counts. This makes individuals more conservative about how they vote and reluctant to voice support.
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Comments
Voting
Voting is only one type of group decision making although there are numerous twists on that approach. Group decision making should be a core topic in any facilitation training and it should include a variety of methods.
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This isn’t necessarily because they’re worried about being blamed for making a bad call. Rather, they fear they don’t have enough information to make the right call. <<< Does this mean there have been blind studies demonstrating this to be factual ? Without measurement it's just an opinion (as I see so often in articles here)
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