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Innovative Decision-Making Techniques [electronic resource] : A FOCCUSSED Approach / by Terry Bresnick, Omar Periu.

By: Bresnick, Terry [author.].
Contributor(s): Periu, Omar [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Synthesis Lectures on Operations Research and Applications: Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2022Edition: 1st ed. 2022.Description: XVII, 150 p. 32 illus., 13 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783031112805.Subject(s): Operations research | Business | Management science | Production management | Probabilities | Operations Research and Decision Theory | Business and Management | Operations Management | Probability TheoryAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 658,403 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction -- Framing the Decision -- Understanding Objectives and Values -- Creating Choices -- Identifying Consequences -- Incorporating Uncertainty -- Making Swaps and Trade-offs -- Selecting Solutions -- Eliciting Data: Making Your Decision-Making Processes More Productive -- Disseminating and Communicating Your Decisions -- FOCCUSSED Decision Making Wrap-Up.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: This book provides a blend of quantitative and qualitative approaches to decision making, while also bridging the gap between the theory of how to make good decisions versus how people actually make decisions. The authors present the tools and techniques of decision analysis to learn how to become a FOCCUSSED decision maker: Identify and properly Frame the decision or problem at hand Specify the goals, Objectives, and values that you are trying to achieve Develop creative, meaningful Choices from among which you can choose Evaluate the Consequences of selecting each alternative using your goals, objectives, and values Think about the key Uncertainties that could impact the decision Understand the Swaps and trade-offs that you are willing to make Develop an approach for implementing your Solution Elicit the data you'll need from a variety of sources and Disseminate and communicate yourdecisions to others. The authors define a decision as the choice among alternatives, based on how we value and trade-off their pros and cons, made in the face of uncertainty about what will actually happen. The decision-making process is presented as having three pillars to support the decision maker: Preferences-what we prefer, what meets our goals and objectives, and the recognition that preferences are personal to the one making the decision; Alternatives-the choices, options, or courses of action that we have, and over which we have some degree of control; and Information-what we know about the situation, what we don't know, how we connect choices to outcomes, and how we deal with uncertainty. Key components of good decision-making include how to define your goals and objectives, how to incorporate uncertainties that we all face, and how to develop better alternatives, all of which are discussed. Sophisticated techniques are presented ina way that is accessible to the average decision maker. Probability theory is utilized to improve decisions, and uncertainties are captured in decision trees. Risk avoidance, risk transfer, and risk mitigation are also discussed. Readers will gain a clear understanding of how to articulate the goals and objectives that should be the focal point of any decision.
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Introduction -- Framing the Decision -- Understanding Objectives and Values -- Creating Choices -- Identifying Consequences -- Incorporating Uncertainty -- Making Swaps and Trade-offs -- Selecting Solutions -- Eliciting Data: Making Your Decision-Making Processes More Productive -- Disseminating and Communicating Your Decisions -- FOCCUSSED Decision Making Wrap-Up.

This book provides a blend of quantitative and qualitative approaches to decision making, while also bridging the gap between the theory of how to make good decisions versus how people actually make decisions. The authors present the tools and techniques of decision analysis to learn how to become a FOCCUSSED decision maker: Identify and properly Frame the decision or problem at hand Specify the goals, Objectives, and values that you are trying to achieve Develop creative, meaningful Choices from among which you can choose Evaluate the Consequences of selecting each alternative using your goals, objectives, and values Think about the key Uncertainties that could impact the decision Understand the Swaps and trade-offs that you are willing to make Develop an approach for implementing your Solution Elicit the data you'll need from a variety of sources and Disseminate and communicate yourdecisions to others. The authors define a decision as the choice among alternatives, based on how we value and trade-off their pros and cons, made in the face of uncertainty about what will actually happen. The decision-making process is presented as having three pillars to support the decision maker: Preferences-what we prefer, what meets our goals and objectives, and the recognition that preferences are personal to the one making the decision; Alternatives-the choices, options, or courses of action that we have, and over which we have some degree of control; and Information-what we know about the situation, what we don't know, how we connect choices to outcomes, and how we deal with uncertainty. Key components of good decision-making include how to define your goals and objectives, how to incorporate uncertainties that we all face, and how to develop better alternatives, all of which are discussed. Sophisticated techniques are presented ina way that is accessible to the average decision maker. Probability theory is utilized to improve decisions, and uncertainties are captured in decision trees. Risk avoidance, risk transfer, and risk mitigation are also discussed. Readers will gain a clear understanding of how to articulate the goals and objectives that should be the focal point of any decision.

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