The verb “to decide” derives from the Latin word “recidere”, that means “to
chop off”. To decide means choosing a thing and chopping the rest. The
combination of many
decisions all together defines your corporate direction, or in other words, your strategy.
Making effective decisions in a business context requires data, information and
knowledge and that can be found inside and outside organizations. The
information has to be organized to become useful: that’s the role of information
systems. They create a complex system, most of the time aided by software, to
organize and categorize knowledge and information. They select information from
inside and outside the organization and process it.
We should make a
distinction: information systems are a completely different thing from the
software that elaborates this information. In fact, information systems are all
about processes, procedures and people. Directly under this level, we can find
the software commonly used to produce useful information from disorganized data:
Business Intelligence tools. BI tools collect data from various sources into
enormous database and process them into “reports” that can be more or less
aggregated.
A lot of theories suggest that information is an essential tool to make
better decisions. They even came to correlate the “aggregation” of information
with the hierarchy level of decision makers. This pyramid shows a typical
organization from a theory perspective: at the top the decision ‘’the makers’’
and at the bottom the “the executers”.

Following the chart, top management typically uses less structured and less
organized information. Going down to hierarchy, information become more
detailed, more easily structured. The chart represents an ideal situation, where
information could always be “rationalized” and used to support decisions. In
practice, information could be “rationalized” only in part, and the rest will
never be processed. For this reason, I think that classification should be
improved. There are some important things we should consider when we talk about
information and decisions: (1) that we are not the perfect decision makers that
the theory depict and (2) the importance of the "everyday" decisions in shaping
your business strategy.
Individual ability to make good decisions
We are not completely rational processing boxes. Our decision process is a
matter of unconsciousness and experience: two important elements that take the
information we have (not all information, only the ones we consider useful for
our internal working) and get to a decision. Neuro-Linguistic Programming, a
practice widely used for personal improvement, represents clearly this process:
we are governed by automated behaviours, and in most cases we are not even aware
of them. These automated behaviours are acquired during the years, through the
experience we have made. We are constantly re-using them in our life. NLP
demonstrates that all the information we acquire is filtered through our
personal vision of external reality. In this case, the final result of the
decision process cannot be considered “perfect” by an objective mean: we can
only say that it is the best decision we can do, considering our internal
workings, past experience and information at our disposal. Our thinking process,
potentially, is far more important than the information we have at our disposal.
We have to take into account that rationalized information is only a part of the
entire process.
Business strategy and decision-making
I think that strategy is not about a “big decision” and a lot of “small
decisions”: it’s better defined as a vision of reality and a direction where to
point the organization. In this context, top management creates a “business
culture” where all business decisions fit. Business culture has to go “down” the
hierarchal pyramid, involving and guiding workers at all levels. We can see that every
decision has a background, and that background is necessary to maintain ‘’the
right ‘’ company direction and values. Take as an example the “Don’t be evil”
motto of Google: it’s business culture, and supposedly every decision at every
level should significantly consider that phrase. This approach calls into
question the classical view of hierarchal organization: in every level and in
every context, everyone becomes potentially a “decision makers”, and this
eliminates the concept of "doers". The information should be available at
every level, specialized for the range of tasks that the workers has to do and
no longer divided into aggregated and non-aggregated.
The role of BI tools and collaboration software
Information has value, and the organization that builds an infrastructure
capable of processing large amount of information coming from various sources,
has certainly a better tool to improve efficiency and effectiveness. Reports,
produced from collected data, create the possibility to know more about external
world and how things are changing: in a context where business has to adapt
constantly to market variations, it is essential to implement good business
intelligence (BI) tools.
BI tools provide an efficient way to organize the information that can be
rationalized, or, in other words, that you can write down. Tacit knowledge, or
knowledge that cannot be formalized, remains excluded. For this reason, it’s not
a good move to rely only on BI tools if you want to know how the facts are
inside and outside the organization. We exposed this concept before: we have to
consider also our vision of reality and our unconscious way of resolve problems. This is a scheme taken from the work of two famous organizational scientists,
Nonaka and Takeuchi, enriched with consideration of BI and collaboration tools:

This scheme could also represent a workflow that depict passages from
explicit rationalized knowledge to tacit knowledge, and then again to the
explicit one. Every step can be assisted by a software: Business Intelligence in
the case of externalization to combination route and collaboration/knowledge
sharing software in the other phases.
IIn other words, we should expand our view through sharing and collaboration.
I know it could sound rather simplistic, but in most cases it’s the best thing
we can do to make better decisions. We should start from the assumption: what we
know is a filtered representation of reality, and we should not take decisions
(especially the most important ones) based only on that filter.
In this context, alongside BI tools we should integrate collaboration tools
in the decision process. We could imagine a continuous workflow, where data
analysis is accompanied by sessions of sharing and collaboration. Every decision
should be the result of these two steps, and we should find the limit where to
stop to analyze data and start to talk about our view and share it with the
others.
References: Nonaka, Ikujiro; Takeuchi, Hirotaka (1995), The knowledge
creating company: how Japanese companies create the dynamics of innovation, New
York: Oxford University Press, pp. 284, ISBN 9780195092691 |