{"id":3794,"date":"1963-01-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1963-01-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1963-vol-44-no-1-decision-making-by-management\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:35:33","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:35:33","slug":"january-1963-vol-44-no-1-decision-making-by-management","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1963-vol-44-no-1-decision-making-by-management\/","title":{"rendered":"January 1963 &#8211; VOL. 44, NO. 1 &#8211; Decision Making by Management"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Management is a decision-making process.                     Its special function is to choose between alternative means                     of moving toward an objective.<\/p>\n<p> None of the many changes brought about by technology appears                     likely to diminish the opportunities open to men who are gifted                     with skill in making decisions and trained in administration.<\/p>\n<p>Doing business in an economy like ours demands foresight                     and judgment besides resourcefulness and courage. Only the                     person who applies all these qualities in making decisions                     advances his company&#8217;s business.<\/p>\n<p>The management principle is readily stated: the business                     manager is paid to find and define the problem, analyse it,                     develop alternate solutions, decide upon the best solution,                     and convert his decision into effective action.<\/p>\n<p>The world is full of people who shun this sort of responsibility.                     Only a few seek it, and they become leaders. They know that                     there is a possibility that a decision they reach may be wrong,                     but they know that this chance may be minimized by following                     some simple rules and procedures.<\/p>\n<p>Many business decisions made from day to day are routine                     and repetitive to the manager, but he must bear patiently                     in mind that the problems are new to his staff and it is part                     of his duty to give guidance.<\/p>\n<p>This is part of the leadership function of the business                     manager. Everyone has a stake of the most concrete kind in                     leadership, because the manager is accountable for the success                     of his business or his department and for the continued employment                     of all those associated with it and the satisfaction of those                     holding stock in it.<\/p>\n<p>On a wall of the Engineering Societies&#8217; Library in New York                     we read this inscription: &#8220;Management is the art and science                     of preparing, organizing and directing human effort applied                     to control the forces and utilize the materials of nature                     for the benefit of man.&#8221; In carrying out this mandate, the                     manager has to weigh the risks of every course of action against                     the expected gains. Then, having decided, he must issue clear                     orders and put forth the drive to get things done.<\/p>\n<p>Administration of a business is a network, in which every                     decision is connected in some way with other decisions which                     have preceded it, and will have a bearing upon decisions to                     be made in the future.<\/p>\n<p>Decision making has never been easy, even for the highly                     trained man, but history is made up of the stories of men                     and women who were good at it. Business is complex, not only                     within its own walls but because of outside influences and                     pressures. A manager needs the qualities of a statesman, so                     as to see his business in all its relationships. He has to                     know his firm&#8217;s objectives and policies, what resources he                     can call upon, the capabilities of those who will make his                     decisions effective, and then produce plans that take all                     these into account.<\/p>\n<p>A cardinal rule is that his decision must be adequate to                     the solution of the problem. There is no use in attacking                     a tank with a bow and arrow, and it is wasteful to shoot sparrows                     with a big game rifle.<\/p>\n<h3>Wide knowledge<\/h3>\n<p>Decisions on important matters are not within the reach                     of men and women whose knowledge of facts and the forces acting                     upon them is small. There must be on hand a large store of                     memories of previous experiences and things learned which                     can be linked with the current problem.<\/p>\n<p>No reasoning can be done by our minds unless we have units                     of comparison gathered through experience and study. When                     we have many objects in our minds, our imagination ranges                     over them, assesses them, takes a little of this and a little                     of that, relates them significantly, and produces a decision.                     What is the faculty we praise so highly as &#8220;good judgment&#8221;                     except this: the ability to bring together a fact which we                     have just unearthed and a general judgment suitable to the                     purpose long since deposited in the archives of our memory,                     and unite them effectively.<\/p>\n<p>The business man must never stop adding to his stock of                     knowledge and understanding, but this need not be a burdensome                     task. If he is under pressure all day long he will find it                     relaxing as well as useful to spend his leisure hours at something                     in which he must be deliberative: such as reading one of the                     classics (like the <em>Thoughts <\/em>of Marcus Aurelius or                     the <em>Teachings <\/em>of Epictetus, which have many ideas                     useful in thinking through to decisions) or watching documentary                     films which broaden his horizons.<\/p>\n<p>It is altogether foolish to think of the capable decision                     maker in terms of a cartoon stereotype-as a table pounder,                     a window gazer, a pacer of the office, an aspirin user or                     a man with a wet towel around his head. One general belief                     may be given credence in some measure: the person who makes                     important decisions may not be sweet tempered. He is under                     pressure, he takes risks, he wrestles with the task of getting                     his ideas carried out, he has little patience with incompetency.<\/p>\n<p>Some firms make no provision for the stress of management.                     Their managers are loaded with detail instead of being relieved                     of all trivia so that they may devote their special talents                     to important things.<\/p>\n<p>The man who has to swim hard in muddy waters to get his                     head out where he can make an important decision may be plagued                     with &#8220;doubting folly.&#8221; This is a state of mind in which a                     man cannot remember whether he did this or decided that or                     whether he did it in the best way. He is forever returning                     to see if he has turned off the gas, locked the door, and                     the like. He calls back decisions for review.<\/p>\n<h3>When to be careful<\/h3>\n<p>It is necessary in the convulsive scene of business life                     to assign proportions to our problems and to set up priorities.                     Clearing up mechanical difficulties is different from reaching                     a decision on a course of action which involves people, budgets,                     and markets.<\/p>\n<p>You need to give patience, time and thought to decision                     making when you are on unfamiliar ground or dealing with a                     strange subject. Decisions come easily to the sales manager                     who has been twenty years on the job so long as they involve                     only the factors to which he is accustomed. When a new factor                     is introduced, or the manager moves into an area where he                     is a stranger, he must take time for orientation.<\/p>\n<p>The power of deciding involves the danger of going astray                     ( that is the essence of deciding. And going astray involves                     some kind of penalty ( that is the essence of error. The consequences                     of a decision are part of the total problem, and should be                     considered as factors in it. We must balance risk against                     gain, and be neither deterred by the one nor dazzled by the                     other.<\/p>\n<p>This involves forethought. The manager is subject to one                     trial not common to the worker: he has the continual feeling                     of incompletion. His job is never done. His energy drives                     him to consideration of the next job while this one is still                     in the works, and he needs to keep his balance in both.<\/p>\n<p>There is no necessary virtue in &#8220;planning&#8221; itself. Its value                     depends upon what the plan is for, what ends it will serve,                     what difficulties it is designed to overcome ( difficulties                     arising from the caprices of fate, the actions of competitors                     and the quirks of human nature. Without a plan, fluid though                     it may be, we cannot reach decisions intelligently.<\/p>\n<p>An umpire must call the strikes and balls as he sees them,                     instantly. But mere speed in coming to decisions may have                     small relevance at the top business management level where                     a man&#8217;s contribution to the enterprise may be the making of                     two or three significant decisions a month.<\/p>\n<p>This is not to say that we should debate and stew over every                     problem. We are probably too much given to sending out a man                     with a red flag in front of every new idea as they used to                     do with steam locomotives. On the whole, it is wiser to make                     a decision promptly and crisply after giving the matter adequate                     thought than to linger over it and lose momentum and drive.<\/p>\n<p>To make a sound decision it is not necessary to have all                     the facts, but it is necessary to know what facts are missing                     so that we may make allowance for the gap and decide the degree                     of rigidity to give our orders.<\/p>\n<p>Some managers, in trying to avoid off-the-cuff                     masterminding, make it a practice to take time to sleep on                     a problem. This can be useful if a tentative decision has                     been reached or workable alternatives outlined so that the                     subconscious has something tangible to push around.<\/p>\n<p>Very little that is good can be said about procrastinating.                     Any business will become paralyzed if there are persistently                     long delays in the making of managerial decisions. They cause                     waste of time among personnel, loss of team-work, and                     forfeiture of faith in management.<\/p>\n<p>Excuses for postponing a decision are not hard to find.                     Recall the hesitancy of Hamlet. One moment he pretended that                     he was too cowardly to perform the deed; at another he questioned                     the truthfulness of the ghost; at another he thought the time                     was unsuitable, that it would be better to wait until the                     King was at some evil act and then to kill him, and so on.                     Every reason had a certain plausibility, but it would not                     stand serious consideration.<\/p>\n<p>There are, of course, times for postponement, when a resolute                     determination to take no action until more facts are available                     is a constructive contribution to wise decision. The warning                     is against unwise or frivolous putting off. We must keep in                     mind that to make no decision is itself a decision, and must                     be justified.<\/p>\n<p>Effective use of postponement was made by Penelope in Homer&#8217;s                     <em>Odyssey<\/em>. During the protracted absence of her husband,                     Ulysses, Penelope was besieged by suitors for her hand in                     marriage. She put them off for several years by telling them                     that she would give her decision when the burial cloth on                     which she was working was complete. Then she undid by night                     what she had woven by day, and so staved off decision. Ulysses                     returned and drove out the suitors.<\/p>\n<h3>Computers and committees<\/h3>\n<p>The manager of today and the future will have to make decisions                     involving an infinite number of considerations. While he will                     make all possible use of electronic equipment and committees,                     the final choice between alternatives is his alone.<\/p>\n<p>Mechanical aids are widely in use. They make the assembly                     of data and the calculation of quantities easy. But, in a                     competitive market, the firm whose managers best handle the                     qualitative factors which are indigestible to machines will                     have the edge in business success.<\/p>\n<p>The results of massive computations depend upon the knowledge,                     discrimination and intelligence of the men who feed in the                     raw data and assess the resulting report. The machines cannot                     define the problem, determine the right questions to ask,                     set objectives or lay down rules. They do help in analysing                     the problem and presenting alternatives. They give facts instead                     of guesses and generalities. They are tools for decision making.<\/p>\n<p>We recall <em>The Sorcerer&#8217;s Apprentice<\/em>, the great                     symphonic composition of Paul Dukas. The apprentice learned                     his master&#8217;s secret for turning a broom handle into a servant,                     and ordered the automaton to take a pail and fetch water.                     Then he couldn&#8217;t stop the creature, which kept splashing water                     all over the room. The apprentice, who hadn&#8217;t learned the                     magic words to bring the automaton to a standstill, seized                     an axe and split it in two: now there were two creatures busily                     carrying water. Not until the magician returned were the robots                     stopped.<\/p>\n<p>Unless the manager of today knows the limitations of machines,                     when and how to cut them off, and the fact that he himself                     must define, analyse, judge and decide, he will be like the                     Sorcerer&#8217;s Apprentice, a victim of his own bag of tricks.<\/p>\n<p>Decision by committee holds perils of another sort. There                     is no virtue in reaching a decision by yourself when there                     is time and opportunity to consult others who have special                     knowledge. To do so would be to waste available talent. But                     no business can prosper under a debating society.<\/p>\n<p>The function of a committee is to talk around a subject                     so that all its facets are revealed, to bring out the facts                     and to spark thought. Then the manager must judge the relative                     value of what has been said, assess the alternatives presented,                     and make the decision.<\/p>\n<h3>Making a decision<\/h3>\n<p>The manager who wishes to build up the habit of making decisions                     with wisdom and effectiveness might do well to consider these                     steps: (1) look at the situation generally and from it extract                     the problem; (2) put the problem into words; (3) tidy up the                     problem; (4) do the preparatory research thoroughly; (5) brush                     aside preconceived ideas; (6) consider the facts; (7) think                     through to a solution.<\/p>\n<p>The first job is to find the real problem, divesting the                     situation of all irrelevant details. Masses of data may look                     impressive, but only those facts which apply to the problem                     in hand are worth considering.<\/p>\n<p>It is quite right to see the pattern of the total situation                     and how the parts hang together, but successful managers have                     the capacity to reduce the whole picture to simple terms.                     Mendel, to whom we are indebted for the first effective work                     on hybridization, did not follow his predecessors&#8217; lead in                     taking only a summary view, but examined every plant separately.<\/p>\n<p>A problem only becomes intelligible when it is put into                     words. There simply is no magic formula for decision making,                     but the man who approaches the point of decision by setting                     out his problem in an orderly way stands a better chance of                     reaching the right outcome than one who relies on snap judgments.<\/p>\n<p>In laying out an approach to decision making we need to                     differentiate between tasks which demand only the application                     of known techniques and those which have unusual conditions                     that require clarification and directed action. For example,                     the mail despatching staff faced with an unusual spate of                     envelopes knows that extra effort and perhaps extra time will                     see them through; but if there is an unusual number of complaints                     about wrong addresses, accompanied by a mounting pile of uncompleted                     orders, then there is a real problem.<\/p>\n<p>It can be solved if the person responsible grasps its nature,                     gauges its true dimension, decides what to do about it, and                     takes immediate steps to cope with it. He breaks a big problem                     down into small, easily-tackled units, changing a vague                     difficulty into a specific concrete form. He may go so far                     as to answer one &#8220;yes or no&#8221; question and then ask others                     until the major problem is solved.<\/p>\n<p>One method advocated by some teachers is &#8220;take it apart&#8221;.                     You write down the problem about which you must make a decision.                     In two columns underneath write down the points &#8220;for&#8221; and                     &#8220;against&#8221;. When this is done seriously and honestly you have                     a good accounting, and your decision will be based upon the                     balance.<\/p>\n<h3>Tidy up problems<\/h3>\n<p>Managers may smooth their way by having all proposals and                     problems tidied up before moving toward decisions. Almost                     every problem needs to be explored through such questions                     as these: Why is this necessary or desirable? What can it                     be expected to accomplish? How can it be worked out? Who will                     do it? Who will be affected by it? What harmful situations                     might result?<\/p>\n<p>Superiority in decision making rests on a solid basis of                     preparation, with a grasp of all the possibilities. When you                     reach a tentative conclusion, try to knock it down with dispassionate                     energy. Ask: &#8220;What will happen if&nbsp;&#8230;&nbsp;? Does this                     decision take care of A, B and C possibilities?&#8221; By proceeding                     in this way the business executive will borrow a bit of the                     value of the scientific method and spirit: the resolute asking                     of the questions: &#8220;What else?&#8221;&#8230; &#8220;What if?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>You need to pay attention to detail in the preliminary stages,                     while keeping in mind the end purpose. Toscanini, the great                     orchestra leader, is quoted as saying: &#8220;In rehearsing a musical                     work, the important passages can frequently take care of themselves;                     it is the supposedly unimportant phrase or line that demands                     careful consideration.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The manager needs suppleness of mind. He will display enthusiasm,                     but not the sort of zeal which blinds him to facts. He recognizes                     that his opinion about a thing is only something that comes                     between ignorance and understanding. It is knowledge in the                     making. To change an opinion in the face of new facts is a                     sign of vitality and progress.<\/p>\n<p>In the course of his deliberation he will have taken advantage                     of subconscious thought. All creative thinking, including                     scientific research, emerges from the subconscious. The &#8220;passed                     to you for action&#8221; memo which consciousness receives may be                     couched in vague terms, and may have to be worked into shape.                     But this is no mystical process: it goes on hour after hour                     throughout our lives. It is, however, an advantage to recognize                     it so that fullest use may be made of it.<\/p>\n<p>Last in this group of seven suggestions is the thinking                     through of the proposed decision to its conclusion. This involves                     testing every step leading to the decision as well as anticipating                     what may follow upon it.<\/p>\n<p>When you have reached the point where you have gathered                     the facts and tested them, thought about them and weighed                     the consequences, then make your decision. Here are two illustrations                     of the folly of hesitating. Buridan, a French philosopher                     of the twelfth century, told us about the ass which was placed                     midway between two equally attractive bales of hay, and died                     of starvation because he couldn&#8217;t choose which one to eat.                     Robert Browning&#8217;s poem reminds us that Saul, crowned king                     at a time when one swift blow would have scattered his foes                     and united his friends, stood midway between his duty and                     his task, and indecision slew him.<\/p>\n<h3>The end result<\/h3>\n<p>We have located and defined our problem, collected facts,                     weighed the favourable against the unfavourable; we have listened                     to what can be said by experts, friends and enemies; we have                     checked the accuracy of our information and of our thinking;                     we have analysed the causes of our problem and the effects                     of various solutions; and we have arrived at a decision. What                     do we do next?<\/p>\n<p>The fatal thing to do is pigeon-hole it. The only place                     to put a good decision is into execution. An idea has been                     born, it has evolved, and has been transformed into a decision.                     Now the manager must participate in carrying the decision                     into execution.<\/p>\n<p>It would be a mistake at this point to spend time looking                     back to see if you are too far from shore. You are obligated,                     having made the decision, to develop a certain amount of blindness                     to the possibility of failure. By that act you give confidence                     to those who must do the work of implementing the decision:                     your junior managers, foremen and workers.<\/p>\n<p>It would be wrong to cling to a course if some vital new                     facts in its disfavour become known, but don&#8217;t change your                     mind merely because you are running into obstacles. The road                     may be strewn with rocks, but that merely means that it is                     a rough road, not that it is going in the wrong direction.<\/p>\n<p>Be sure that your decision is promulgated clearly. Unless                     you make order and relation for your people out of the unrelated                     ideas and facts with which you have wrestled, they cannot                     be expected to respond with effective action. They must know                     what change in behaviour is expected of them, what change                     to expect in the behaviour of others with whom they work,                     and what change will be made in the working conditions.<\/p>\n<p>This is the manager&#8217;s directional guidance. He establishes                     goals and shows how to reach them. Children reciting Longfellow&#8217;s                     poem &#8220;Excelsior&#8221; have wondered where the ambitious, sad, self-denying                     and daring boy carrying his banner with the strange device                     was climbing to. Let&#8217;s not leave workers in the dark about                     our purposes and paths.<\/p>\n<p>Mechanical problems associated with your decision are relatively                     simple compared with the human problems.<\/p>\n<p>For example, your decision may change the apparent status                     of workers, and it is astonishing how infallibly a man will                     be annoyed and deeply pained by any seeming wrong done to                     his feeling of self-importance.<\/p>\n<p>This is one reason for careful advance consultation of all                     those who are to be affected by the decision. It will give                     you the benefit of their experience and their ideas, and make                     them participants in whatever comes to pass.<\/p>\n<p>Being a decisive manager doesn&#8217;t mean being truculent or                     living apart. To be part of the working force was emphasized                     as a necessity of management by speakers at the Duke of Edinburgh&#8217;s                     Study Conference in Oxford. The manager must make the time                     to keep in touch with juniors and to visit the production                     line frequently. Only thus can he appraise the spirit of his                     people, tap their interest, and assure their co-operation                     in carrying out plans upon which he decides. Human motivations                     and human emotions are involved as factors in the solution                     of every problem.<\/p>\n<p>Of this be sure: no decision can be better than the people                     who have to carry it out. Their enthusiasm, competence and                     understanding determine what they can and will do.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[43],"class_list":["post-3794","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-43"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>January 1963 - VOL. 44, NO. 1 - Decision Making by Management - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1963-vol-44-no-1-decision-making-by-management\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"January 1963 - VOL. 44, NO. 1 - Decision Making by Management - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Management is a decision-making process. 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Its special function is to choose between alternative means of moving toward an objective. None of the many changes brought about by technology appears likely to diminish the opportunities open to men who are gifted with skill in making decisions and trained in administration. 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