DocumentCode
2389822
Title
Group decision making: friend or foe?
Author
Wetmore, William R., III ; Summers, Joshua
Author_Institution
Robert Bosch Corp., Clemson, CA, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
2-4 Nov. 2003
Firstpage
405
Lastpage
409
Abstract
Recognized as essential to modern business, collaborative meetings are held to make decisions about product design, market definition, employee hiring, and many other factors that affect business operations. Based on the literature on group decision-making (a single collaboratively assigned selection from an array of choices), several hypothesis have been generated for further research based on three fundamental problems with group decision-making: impact of initial preference and time pressure, impact of group dynamics and politics, and the lack of an objective quantitative group preference. We suggest that group decision making should not be utilized unless there are objective criteria (i.e., money, time) that allow the group members to evaluate decision choices for determination of group preferences. Without these objective criteria, the use of group decision-making should be reserved for use in option generation (i.e. brainstorming), problem solving, or creative processes of an exploratory nature.
Keywords
commerce; decision making; management; product design; brainstorming; collaborative meetings; employee hiring; group decision making; group members; group preference; market definition; modern business; product design; Collaboration; Costs; Decision making; Drugs; Electronic switching systems; Fuels; Problem-solving; Product design; Productivity; Social factors;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering Management Conference, 2003. IEMC '03. Managing Technologically Driven Organizations: The Human Side of Innovation and Change
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8150-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMC.2003.1252303
Filename
1252303
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