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What are decision-making styles?
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What are decision-making styles?
Each day is a series of decisions — and you might think you make them mindlessly. But most people have a dominant decision-making style. There’s a common method in the way you approach choices.
Some of these decision-making methods are more productive than others. If you write out multiple pros and cons lists, you might be wasting time overthinking instead of trusting your gut. And gathering all relevant data before making a choice is great when you have concrete, accurate information at your fingertips, less so when data is vague.
Understanding your preferred method can give you the confidence to make and implement decisions without second-guessing yourself. And if you know an approaching decision falls in your area of weakness, you can proceed cautiously, seek others’ input, and use it as a growth opportunity.
According to Rowe and Boulgarides’ Decision Style Theory (DST), decision-making styles work along two axes:
Cognitive complexity refers to the decision-maker’s tolerance for ambiguity. People with a lower tolerance tend to decide by considering a few clearly defined options, while those who tolerate ambiguity well likely to explore novel and less-defined options.
Value orientation refers to where the decision-maker’s priorities lie. People who value technical (task-based) outcomes tend to decide by considering which options will lead to the best measurable results. Those who prefer social outcomes, like group harmony, are more likely to ask stakeholders what they think and focus on guiding the group toward consensus.
Combining these two continuums creates four decision-making styles:
Directive decision-makers have a low tolerance for ambiguity and a technical value orientation
Analytic decision-makers have a high tolerance for ambiguity and a technical value orientation
Behavioral decision-makers have a low tolerance for ambiguity and a social value orientation
Conceptual decision-makers have a high tolerance for ambiguity and a social value orientation
Knowing your decision-making style can make you a better leader. While decision-making is important for everyone, leaders must be especially mindful of their approach, as many of their choices affect others.
If you’re a leader (or hope to be one in the future), learning to adjust your style to each situation is an excellent step toward making better decisions.
Here’s a breakdown of each style with successful examples of decision-making by four leaders who each favor a different method.
Directive decision-makers prefer a high level of structure and make decisions based on technical outcomes. When considering possible courses of action, they focus on their own knowledge: their gut feeling, past experiences, and whether the existing procedures fit the outcomes they’re considering.
Advantages of directive decision-making:
Disadvantages of directive decision-making:
Former Apple CEO Steve Jobs was a classic directive decision-maker. For most of his working life, Jobs was an opinionated manager who went with his gut, rarely consulted, and micromanaged everything — even the food in the cafeteria. Jobs didn’t do market research since he believed customers didn’t know what they wanted.
And under his leadership, Apple released the iMac, iPod, iPhone, and iPad, reversed the company’s previous decline, and grew into a business with one of the largest market capitals in the world.
Analytic decision-makers prefer a low level of structure and make decisions based on technical outcomes. They collect large volumes of data from different sources, then pore over the data to evaluate every solution before settling on one.
Advantages of analytic decision-making:
Disadvantages of analytic decision-making:
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett is an example of an analytic decision-maker. Buffett famously does careful homework on every stock he invests in by reading as many annual reports as possible.
He assimilates massive amounts of data relating to thousands of companies and picks only the very few he expects will be runaway successes in the long term, an approach that’s made him the wealthiest investor in the world.
Behavioral decision-makers prefer a high level of structure and make socially oriented decisions. They map out a few courses of action, seek feedback from various sources, and try to build a consensus regarding the best path. Leaders with this approach tend to favor a consultative management style.
Advantages of behavioral decision-making:
Disadvantages of behavioral decision-making:
Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern promoted consensus throughout her leadership term and demonstrated outstanding behavioral decision-making during the country’s COVID-19 response. Ardern conferred with her advisors to determine the best way to proceed during the pandemic.
Then, she used empathy, honesty, and humor (noting, for example, that the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy were considered essential workers) to build bipartisan political support and virtually unanimous public favor for strict isolation policies.
Conceptual decision-makers prefer a low level of structure and make socially oriented decisions. Rather than providing stakeholders with a predetermined set of possible outcomes (as in behavioral decision-making), conceptual decision-makers set up brainstorming sessions with stakeholders to seek and develop creative solutions.
Advantages of conceptual decision-making:
Disadvantages of conceptual decision-making:
Nobel Peace Prize winner Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of Liberia from 2006–2018 and Africa’s first female head of state, is an excellent example of a conceptual decision-maker. Sirleaf is famed for her ability to relate to people from diverse cultures, educational backgrounds, and walks of life, from diplomats to farmers.
She navigated the difficult position of being a female leader in a deeply patriarchal society, ultimately turning around a country that was in significant debt. She met with foreign heads of state, conferring with them and petitioning for aid and debt relief, and introduced novel solutions to widespread food insecurity following an extended consultation process.
While reading about each decision-making style, one method may call out to you — or perhaps a leadership example resonates. Chances are this is how you make decisions, but if you’re still wondering which style you prioritize, consider the following:
What level of structure makes me feel most comfortable? Consider whether you prefer ambiguous, open-ended situations with many correct answers or highly structured situations where you’re choosing between a small number of obvious options.
What’s my main priority when making a decision? Think about whether you seek out numbers and concrete outcomes or talk to people and aim to maintain group harmony.
Then, compare your ambiguity tolerance and technical versus social priorities to determine your decision-making style based on the previously outlined definitions.
Great leaders are self-aware: they know when to play to their strengths and when situations call for a different approach. Here’s when to call on each decision-making style.
Getting to the right decision is a journey, and identifying your decision-making style is an important step.
But making better decisions isn’t just about arriving at the best solution — it’s also about developing the communication skills to get others on board, analytical skills to determine whether your decision worked, and humility to admit when you’ve made the wrong choice.
The good news is that diversifying your decision-making process at work isn’t just for the benefit of those around you — it also spills over into your personal decisions and makes you more decisive, flexible, and open to lifelong personal growth.
Make meaningful changes and become the best version of yourself. BetterUp's professional Coaches are here to support your personal growth journey.
Make meaningful changes and become the best version of yourself. BetterUp's professional Coaches are here to support your personal growth journey.
Madeline is a writer, communicator, and storyteller who is passionate about using words to help drive positive change. She holds a bachelor's in English Creative Writing and Communication Studies and lives in Denver, Colorado. In her spare time, she's usually somewhere outside (preferably in the mountains) — and enjoys poetry and fiction.
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