The Art of Decision Making: A Leader’s Handbook
How good are you at decisions? Here’s how to up your game.
by Peter Economy
Making decisions is a key function of leadership. Leaders must make complex decisions that affect the lives of their teams, businesses, and communities. Expertise in the fine art of making decisions can empower you to make good ones while creating a culture that fosters collaboration and innovation.
Here are five ways any leader can get better at the art of decision making.
1. Leverage data and analytics.
In this data-crazed age, leveraging analytics is imperative for good decision making. Find key measures that are important to your objectives and monitor those metrics frequently. Data visualization software can simplify confusing data sets and make everyone on your team see what’s going on so they too can make better decisions.
2. Embrace collaborative decision making.
Leadership is not an individual activity. Organizations that promote teamwork in decision making experience better engagement and productivity, according to research from the Institute for Corporate Productivity.
Encourage a more collaborative environment by inviting feedback from your team. Techniques like brainstorming or formal feedback can bring forth a variety of ideas and stimulate innovation. In cases where hard choices need to be made, gather input from across your organization—not just within your team.
3. Avoid cognitive biases.
Cognitive biases such as confirmation bias, anchoring, and overconfidence skew your thinking and push you to make the wrong choices. Challenge these biases by explicitly questioning your assumptions and looking for other perspectives. Strategies such as the “premortem”—a process in which teams imagine how things could go wrong before making a decision—can reveal weaknesses in a plan and eliminate bias.
4. Prioritize ethical considerations.
The moral stakes are high in many decisions, especially when it comes to leadership. You can embed ethics into your decision processes by explicitly asking: “What impact will this decision have on stakeholders?” and “Is this decision aligned with our values?” Having an explicit ethical framework can be a way to make decisions that are both good and sound.
5. Embrace a culture of continuous learning.
Decision making is a skill that gets better with practice. Supporting an environment of continuous learning will help you and your people make smarter choices. Push team members to look for opportunities for professional growth and learn from past choices (both good and bad). Organizations that embrace psychological safety allow space for error, thereby promoting a culture in which learning and development are valued.
The art of decision making can fundamentally transform your performance as a leader. By applying data, allowing for collaboration, recognizing cognitive biases, putting ethics at the center, and embracing continuous learning, you can make difficult decisions with more assurance and certainty, creating an organization that is more creative, resilient, and successful.