Deck 5: Decision Making, Learning, Creativity, and Entrepreneurship

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Question
The classical decision-making model assumes that managers have all of the information they need in order to make the optimum decision.
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Question
When we say that managers are concerned with the legality of a decision,this is another way of saying that they are concerned with the practicality of the decision.
Question
Most day-to-day decisions in business are nonprogrammed decisions.
Question
With regard to the decision-making process,in order to ensure that a decision is implemented,top managers must assign to middle managers the responsibility for making the follow-up decisions necessary to achieve the goal;this is a procedure related to learning from feedback.
Question
According to March and Simon,managerial decision making,especially when nonprogrammed decisions are involved,is frequently more of a science than an art.
Question
Managers can be reactive or proactive in recognizing the need for a decision.
Question
In the decision-making process,to compare what actually happened to what was expected to happen as a result of the decision is a procedure of choosing among alternatives.
Question
The first step in decision making that a manager needs to take is generate a set of feasible alternative courses of action in response to the opportunity or threat.
Question
Programmed decisions are made in response to unusual or novel opportunities and threats.
Question
Economic feasibility of alternatives states that an alternative might seem economically superior to other alternatives;but if managers realize it is likely to threaten other important projects,they might decide it is not practical after all.
Question
March and Simon's administrative model is consistent with the classical model of decision making.
Question
According to the administrative model,managers can never have complete information when they are trying to make a nonprogrammed decision because the complete range of decision-making alternatives is not known.
Question
The likelihood of a manager making an error in judgment is much greater in programmed decision-making than in nonprogrammed decision-making.
Question
While assessing the practicality of alternatives,managers must decide whether they have the capabilities and resources required to implement the alternative,and they must be sure that the alternative will not threaten the attainment of other organizational goals.
Question
The final step in the decision-making process is the implementation of the alternative solution.
Question
A manager who makes a decision based on his/her judgment is using a less rational process than a manager who makes a decision using his/her intuition.
Question
When managers know the possible outcomes of a decision and can assign probabilities to each of these outcomes in terms of their likelihood of occurrence,a situation of risk occurs.
Question
The classical decision-making model is prescriptive in the sense that it specifies how decisions should be made.
Question
When a manager chooses an acceptable alternative instead of the optimum alternative,we say that a satisficing decision has occurred.
Question
Decision making is programmed when managers need to repeatedly make new judgments about what should be done.
Question
When a member of a group challenges the decision that is being made by the group in an attempt to make the group carefully consider the pros and cons of a particular alternative,this member is playing the role of the devil's advocate.
Question
Groupthink is an advantage for groups.
Question
Group creativity can be increased by using brainstorming techniques.
Question
Diversity among decision makers can be used to help reverse the effects of devil's advocacy in group decision making.
Question
Entrepreneurs are likely to be high on the personality trait of openness to experience.
Question
Delphi technique is a written approach to creative problem solving.
Question
Individuals who believe that they are responsible for what happens to them and that their own actions determine important outcomes are said to have an external locus of control.
Question
Entrepreneurship encompasses all the decisions involved in planning,organizing,leading,and controlling resources.
Question
The ability of a decision maker to discover novel ideas that lead to feasible alternatives in decision making is known as creativity.
Question
In brainstorming sessions,the fewer the alternatives presented,the better the brainstorming session.
Question
Entrepreneurship is the same as management.
Question
Contests and rewards signal the importance of coming up with creative ideas and encourage employees to share them.
Question
The nominal group technique is especially useful when an issue is controversial and when different managers champion a similar course of action.
Question
According to Senge's concept of the learning organization,team learning is less important than individual learning when trying to increase organizational learning.
Question
Groups often take longer than individuals to make decisions.
Question
Production blocking is seldom the reason for decreased productivity during brainstorming.
Question
When the members of a group try hard to agree,even when it is done without accurately assessing the information available to the group,we say that ambiguity has occurred.
Question
Intrapreneurs who feel they are getting nowhere in their exiting organizations often become entrepreneurs and develop companies that often compete with the companies they left.
Question
Rationalization is a critical analysis of a preferred alternative to ascertain its strengths and weaknesses before it is implemented.
Question
The group leader writes a statement of the problem and a series of questions to which participating managers are to respond in a brainstorming session.
Question
In the administrative model of decision making,when the number of possible alternatives to a decision is so large that the manager cannot possibly evaluate all of them before making a decision,which of the following has occurred?

A) Satisficing
B) Bounded rationality
C) Brainstorming
D) Devil's advocacy
E) Optimum decision making
Question
What do managers do to regulate routine activities?

A) They create a mission statement.
B) They establish rules and guidelines.
C) They create cross-functional teams.
D) They facilitate a strong organizational culture.
E) They train workers in the use of intuition.
Question
Action Co.is attempting to decide whether or not to launch a new $10 million advertising campaign for a product whose sales have been lagging well below the projected sales for the product.This represents which type of decision for the organization?

A) Groupthink
B) Intuitive
C) Programmed
D) Nonprogrammed
E) Satisficing
Question
An organization's finance department decides to go to the company's usual bank and take out a loan because the company's revenues for the month are projected to be less than its expenses.What type of decision does this represent?

A) Intuition
B) Groupthink
C) Programmed
D) Nonprogrammed
E) Satisficing
Question
When an organization's accounting department decides to send out a bill to a new customer,this represents a(n)________________ decision.

A) programmed
B) nonprogrammed
C) intuitive
D) groupthink
E) bounded rationality
Question
Karen,a manager,orders raw materials when the raw materials inventory reaches a certain point.This is an example of which type of decision?

A) Intuition
B) Satisficing
C) Nonprogrammed
D) Programmed
E) Groupthink
Question
The classical model of decision making specifies how decisions should be made by managers;this is a way of saying that this model of decision making is:

A) heuristic.
B) prescriptive.
C) incomplete.
D) intuitive.
E) satisficing.
Question
A manager of a charity asks the board of directors for permission to hire temporary help when the regular secretary goes on vacation.This is an example of which type of decision?

A) Programmed
B) Groupthink
C) Nonprogrammed
D) Intuition
E) Satisficing
Question
Martin,a plant foreman,asks the plant superintendent to allow him to hire an additional worker whenever overtime hours for the previous month increase by more than 25 percent.This is an example of which type of decision?

A) Intuition
B) Groupthink
C) Satisficing
D) Programmed
E) Nonprogrammed
Question
Decisions that have been made many times in the past and for which managers have rules and guidelines about how to make similar decisions in the future are known as ________________ decisions.

A) nonprogrammed
B) heuristic
C) programmed
D) intuitive
E) creative
Question
Which of the following is a programmed decision?

A) How much to invest in a new product
B) Whether to expand into a new market
C) When to time a new advertising campaign
D) When to bill customers
E) Whether to buy another company
Question
Star,Inc. ,is attempting to decide whether or not if it should change its manufacturing process to a new type of technology.This represents a(n)______________ decision.

A) programmed
B) nonprogrammed
C) groupthink
D) intuitive
E) satisficing
Question
Product champions are a group of intrapreneurs who are deliberately separated from the normal operation of an organization to encourage them to devote all their attention to developing new products.
Question
When fire chiefs manage firefighters battling hazardous,out-of-control fires,they frequently have to depend on their professional instincts to make on-the-spot decisions that will protect the lives of the firefighters and save the lives of others,control the fires,and preserve decisions made in emergency situations involving high ambiguity and rapidly changing conditions.This is an example of which of the following types of decision making?

A) Programmed
B) Routine
C) Groupthink
D) Intuition
E) Satisficing
Question
The idea behind the product champion role is that if intrapreneurs are isolated,they will become so intensely involved in a project that development time will be relatively brief and the quality of the final product will be enhanced.
Question
An organization that has been focusing on a target market located in the eastern part of the United States is attempting to decide whether to expand its sales to the West Coast of the United States.Which of the following types of decisions is being taken by the organization?

A) Intuition
B) Nonprogrammed
C) Groupthink
D) Satisficing
E) Programmed
Question
The classical model of decision making assumes that:

A) the number of alternatives a manager must identify is so great that it is difficult for the manager to even come close to evaluating it all before making a decision.
B) managers have little information to use in making a decision.
C) managers have access to all the information they need to make the optimum decision.
D) managers have neither the time nor the money to search for all possible alternative solutions and evaluate all the potential consequences of those alternatives.
E) managers search for and choose acceptable,or satisfactory,ways to respond to problems and opportunities rather than trying to make the optimal decision.
Question
Nonroutine decisions made in response to novel situations in business are known as ________________ decisions.

A) intuitive
B) creative
C) programmed
D) heuristic
E) nonprogrammed
Question
Casey,the accountant for a small firm,pays the real estate taxes seven days before they are due.This represents which type of decision?

A) Satisficing
B) Programmed
C) Intuition
D) Nonprogrammed
E) Groupthink
Question
Dynamic Explosives is trying to decide whether or not to launch a new product nationally.This represents a(n)________________ decision.

A) programmed
B) intuitive
C) groupthink
D) nonprogrammed
E) satisficing
Question
Managers in biotechnology know that new drugs have a 10 percent chance of passing advanced clinical trials.This is an example of:

A) risk.
B) uncertainty.
C) bounded rationality.
D) incomplete information.
E) satisficing.
Question
When managers know the possible outcomes of a decision and can assign probabilities to each of these outcomes in terms of their likelihood of occurrence in the future,this is known as:

A) uncertainty.
B) certainty.
C) risk.
D) bounded rationality.
E) dialectical inquiry.
Question
The explosion of the space shuttle Challenger is an example of poor managerial decision making by the managers at NASA and Morton Thiokol,who considered and then downplayed the criterion of:

A) ethicalness.
B) practicality.
C) legality.
D) economic feasibility.
E) devil's advocacy.
Question
Based on the work of March and Simon's administrative model of decision making,the first step in the managerial decision-making process is to:

A) choose among alternatives.
B) assess alternatives.
C) implement the chosen alternative.
D) recognize the need for a decision.
E) generate alternatives.
Question
Patrick,a manager,is assessing possible alternatives for the solution of a problem.Patrick performs a cost-benefit analysis of several alternatives in order to determine the net financial payoff of each alternative.Which of the following criteria of decision making is Patrick implementing?

A) Economic feasibility
B) Practicality
C) Ethicalness
D) Legality
E) Dialectical inquiry
Question
When the meaning of the information available to a manager is unclear and can be interpreted in several ways,the information is:

A) certain.
B) ambiguous.
C) bounded.
D) irrational.
E) dialectical.
Question
When managers cannot assign probabilities of future occurrence to possible alternatives with a decision,this is known as:

A) certainty.
B) risk.
C) bounded rationality.
D) uncertainty.
E) dialectical inquiry.
Question
The purchasing manager for Telsa Motor Co.decides to call three suppliers of automobile windshields to ask for a bid on an order for 1,000 windshields for a new Ford car,instead of calling a hundred possible windshield suppliers for such a bid.What type of decision does this represent for the purchasing manager?

A) Nonprogrammed
B) Illusion of control
C) Certainty
D) Programmed
E) Satisficing
Question
With reference to the steps of decision-making process,which of the following is the last step in the managerial decision-making process?

A) Generate alternatives
B) Learn from feedback
C) Recognize the need for a decision
D) Implement the chosen alternative
E) Choose among alternatives
Question
A software firm is considering introducing a new product unlike any previously on the market.Managers cannot estimate the probability of success for the new product.Which of the following best describes the situation?

A) Risk
B) Uncertainty
C) Bounded rationality
D) Incomplete information
E) Satisficing
Question
Dale,a manager,is assessing possible alternatives for the solution of a quality problem in his department.As Dale does so,he attempts to determine if a possible alternative will threaten other company projects.Which of the following criteria of decision-making is being implemented by Dale?

A) Economic feasibility
B) Practicality
C) Legality
D) Ethicalness
E) Groupthink
Question
An organization decides to ask three advertising agencies to pitch a proposal to handle the organization's business,instead of asking all of the advertising agencies in the city where this organization's headquarters are located to pitch the account.What type of decision does this represent?

A) Programmed
B) Nonprogrammed
C) Satisficing
D) Certainty
E) Illusion of control
Question
A manager considers a limited sample of the potential alternative solutions for a problem and selects one that is acceptable instead of attempting to select the optimum solution.This type of decision is called:

A) programmed.
B) intuition.
C) certainty.
D) satisficing.
E) heuristics.
Question
Margaret,a marketing manager,wants to budget the advertising for a new product launch.She is trying to determine the amount of money that her company can afford to spend on advertising this new product.In the context of decision-making,which of the following criteria of alternative courses of action is Margaret implementing?

A) Legality
B) Ethicalness
C) Economic feasibility
D) Practicality
E) Authenticity
Question
The marketing managers of Rudolf Ltd. ,strive so hard to agree on an important decision to launch a product that they ignore information that a similar product already exists in the market and that the barriers to entry into the market are high.This refers to which of the following decision-making processes?

A) Dialectical inquiry
B) Devil's advocacy
C) Groupthink
D) Intuition
E) Representative bias
Question
Cameron,a plant manager,wants to initiate a diversity training program in his plant.He is considering whether his department has enough extra people to cover for the time his employees will be engaged in the classes.Which of the following criteria of decision making is Cameron implementing?

A) Legality
B) Ethicalness
C) Devil's advocacy
D) Economic feasibility
E) Practicality
Question
Esteban,a manager,performs a financial analysis of several investment alternatives in order to determine which alternative is most likely to impact the organization's profitability.Esteban is focusing on:

A) bounded rationality.
B) ethicalness.
C) economic feasibility.
D) dialectical inquiry.
E) legality.
Question
The pattern of faulty and biased decision making that occurs in groups whose members strive for argument at the expense of good decision making is called:

A) brainstorming.
B) groupthink.
C) devil's advocacy.
D) bounded rationality.
E) satisficing.
Question
Kathleen,a manager,is attempting to determine whether she has both the capability and the resources to produce one of several possible new products.In the context of decision making,on which of the following criteria of alternative courses of action is Kathleen focusing?

A) Practicality
B) Ethicalness
C) Legality
D) Economic feasibility
E) Dialectical inquiry
Question
When managers decide that they have the capabilities and resources required to implement an alternative,and they are sure that the alternative will not threaten the attainment of other organizational goals,they are focusing on which of the following criteria of alternative courses of action?

A) Legality
B) Ethicalness
C) Economic feasibility
D) Practicality
E) Authenticity
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Deck 5: Decision Making, Learning, Creativity, and Entrepreneurship
1
The classical decision-making model assumes that managers have all of the information they need in order to make the optimum decision.
True
Explanation: The classical model assumes managers have access to all the information they need to make the optimum decision,which is the most appropriate decision possible in light of what they believe to be the most desirable consequences for the organization.
2
When we say that managers are concerned with the legality of a decision,this is another way of saying that they are concerned with the practicality of the decision.
False
Explanation: Managers ensuring that a possible course of action will not violate any domestic or international laws or government regulations,is concerned with legality of a decision.However,practicality of a decision is when managers decide whether they have the capabilities and resources required to implement the alternative course of action,and they must be sure the alternative will not threaten the attainment of other organizational goals.
3
Most day-to-day decisions in business are nonprogrammed decisions.
False
Explanation: Most decision making that relates to the day-to-day running of an organization is programmed decision making.
4
With regard to the decision-making process,in order to ensure that a decision is implemented,top managers must assign to middle managers the responsibility for making the follow-up decisions necessary to achieve the goal;this is a procedure related to learning from feedback.
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k this deck
5
According to March and Simon,managerial decision making,especially when nonprogrammed decisions are involved,is frequently more of a science than an art.
Unlock Deck
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6
Managers can be reactive or proactive in recognizing the need for a decision.
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k this deck
7
In the decision-making process,to compare what actually happened to what was expected to happen as a result of the decision is a procedure of choosing among alternatives.
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8
The first step in decision making that a manager needs to take is generate a set of feasible alternative courses of action in response to the opportunity or threat.
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9
Programmed decisions are made in response to unusual or novel opportunities and threats.
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10
Economic feasibility of alternatives states that an alternative might seem economically superior to other alternatives;but if managers realize it is likely to threaten other important projects,they might decide it is not practical after all.
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11
March and Simon's administrative model is consistent with the classical model of decision making.
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12
According to the administrative model,managers can never have complete information when they are trying to make a nonprogrammed decision because the complete range of decision-making alternatives is not known.
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13
The likelihood of a manager making an error in judgment is much greater in programmed decision-making than in nonprogrammed decision-making.
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14
While assessing the practicality of alternatives,managers must decide whether they have the capabilities and resources required to implement the alternative,and they must be sure that the alternative will not threaten the attainment of other organizational goals.
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15
The final step in the decision-making process is the implementation of the alternative solution.
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16
A manager who makes a decision based on his/her judgment is using a less rational process than a manager who makes a decision using his/her intuition.
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17
When managers know the possible outcomes of a decision and can assign probabilities to each of these outcomes in terms of their likelihood of occurrence,a situation of risk occurs.
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18
The classical decision-making model is prescriptive in the sense that it specifies how decisions should be made.
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19
When a manager chooses an acceptable alternative instead of the optimum alternative,we say that a satisficing decision has occurred.
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20
Decision making is programmed when managers need to repeatedly make new judgments about what should be done.
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21
When a member of a group challenges the decision that is being made by the group in an attempt to make the group carefully consider the pros and cons of a particular alternative,this member is playing the role of the devil's advocate.
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22
Groupthink is an advantage for groups.
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23
Group creativity can be increased by using brainstorming techniques.
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24
Diversity among decision makers can be used to help reverse the effects of devil's advocacy in group decision making.
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25
Entrepreneurs are likely to be high on the personality trait of openness to experience.
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26
Delphi technique is a written approach to creative problem solving.
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27
Individuals who believe that they are responsible for what happens to them and that their own actions determine important outcomes are said to have an external locus of control.
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28
Entrepreneurship encompasses all the decisions involved in planning,organizing,leading,and controlling resources.
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29
The ability of a decision maker to discover novel ideas that lead to feasible alternatives in decision making is known as creativity.
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30
In brainstorming sessions,the fewer the alternatives presented,the better the brainstorming session.
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31
Entrepreneurship is the same as management.
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32
Contests and rewards signal the importance of coming up with creative ideas and encourage employees to share them.
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33
The nominal group technique is especially useful when an issue is controversial and when different managers champion a similar course of action.
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34
According to Senge's concept of the learning organization,team learning is less important than individual learning when trying to increase organizational learning.
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35
Groups often take longer than individuals to make decisions.
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36
Production blocking is seldom the reason for decreased productivity during brainstorming.
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37
When the members of a group try hard to agree,even when it is done without accurately assessing the information available to the group,we say that ambiguity has occurred.
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38
Intrapreneurs who feel they are getting nowhere in their exiting organizations often become entrepreneurs and develop companies that often compete with the companies they left.
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39
Rationalization is a critical analysis of a preferred alternative to ascertain its strengths and weaknesses before it is implemented.
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40
The group leader writes a statement of the problem and a series of questions to which participating managers are to respond in a brainstorming session.
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41
In the administrative model of decision making,when the number of possible alternatives to a decision is so large that the manager cannot possibly evaluate all of them before making a decision,which of the following has occurred?

A) Satisficing
B) Bounded rationality
C) Brainstorming
D) Devil's advocacy
E) Optimum decision making
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k this deck
42
What do managers do to regulate routine activities?

A) They create a mission statement.
B) They establish rules and guidelines.
C) They create cross-functional teams.
D) They facilitate a strong organizational culture.
E) They train workers in the use of intuition.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Action Co.is attempting to decide whether or not to launch a new $10 million advertising campaign for a product whose sales have been lagging well below the projected sales for the product.This represents which type of decision for the organization?

A) Groupthink
B) Intuitive
C) Programmed
D) Nonprogrammed
E) Satisficing
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k this deck
44
An organization's finance department decides to go to the company's usual bank and take out a loan because the company's revenues for the month are projected to be less than its expenses.What type of decision does this represent?

A) Intuition
B) Groupthink
C) Programmed
D) Nonprogrammed
E) Satisficing
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45
When an organization's accounting department decides to send out a bill to a new customer,this represents a(n)________________ decision.

A) programmed
B) nonprogrammed
C) intuitive
D) groupthink
E) bounded rationality
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46
Karen,a manager,orders raw materials when the raw materials inventory reaches a certain point.This is an example of which type of decision?

A) Intuition
B) Satisficing
C) Nonprogrammed
D) Programmed
E) Groupthink
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47
The classical model of decision making specifies how decisions should be made by managers;this is a way of saying that this model of decision making is:

A) heuristic.
B) prescriptive.
C) incomplete.
D) intuitive.
E) satisficing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
A manager of a charity asks the board of directors for permission to hire temporary help when the regular secretary goes on vacation.This is an example of which type of decision?

A) Programmed
B) Groupthink
C) Nonprogrammed
D) Intuition
E) Satisficing
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Martin,a plant foreman,asks the plant superintendent to allow him to hire an additional worker whenever overtime hours for the previous month increase by more than 25 percent.This is an example of which type of decision?

A) Intuition
B) Groupthink
C) Satisficing
D) Programmed
E) Nonprogrammed
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Decisions that have been made many times in the past and for which managers have rules and guidelines about how to make similar decisions in the future are known as ________________ decisions.

A) nonprogrammed
B) heuristic
C) programmed
D) intuitive
E) creative
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Unlock Deck
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51
Which of the following is a programmed decision?

A) How much to invest in a new product
B) Whether to expand into a new market
C) When to time a new advertising campaign
D) When to bill customers
E) Whether to buy another company
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Star,Inc. ,is attempting to decide whether or not if it should change its manufacturing process to a new type of technology.This represents a(n)______________ decision.

A) programmed
B) nonprogrammed
C) groupthink
D) intuitive
E) satisficing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Product champions are a group of intrapreneurs who are deliberately separated from the normal operation of an organization to encourage them to devote all their attention to developing new products.
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k this deck
54
When fire chiefs manage firefighters battling hazardous,out-of-control fires,they frequently have to depend on their professional instincts to make on-the-spot decisions that will protect the lives of the firefighters and save the lives of others,control the fires,and preserve decisions made in emergency situations involving high ambiguity and rapidly changing conditions.This is an example of which of the following types of decision making?

A) Programmed
B) Routine
C) Groupthink
D) Intuition
E) Satisficing
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55
The idea behind the product champion role is that if intrapreneurs are isolated,they will become so intensely involved in a project that development time will be relatively brief and the quality of the final product will be enhanced.
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56
An organization that has been focusing on a target market located in the eastern part of the United States is attempting to decide whether to expand its sales to the West Coast of the United States.Which of the following types of decisions is being taken by the organization?

A) Intuition
B) Nonprogrammed
C) Groupthink
D) Satisficing
E) Programmed
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k this deck
57
The classical model of decision making assumes that:

A) the number of alternatives a manager must identify is so great that it is difficult for the manager to even come close to evaluating it all before making a decision.
B) managers have little information to use in making a decision.
C) managers have access to all the information they need to make the optimum decision.
D) managers have neither the time nor the money to search for all possible alternative solutions and evaluate all the potential consequences of those alternatives.
E) managers search for and choose acceptable,or satisfactory,ways to respond to problems and opportunities rather than trying to make the optimal decision.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
58
Nonroutine decisions made in response to novel situations in business are known as ________________ decisions.

A) intuitive
B) creative
C) programmed
D) heuristic
E) nonprogrammed
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k this deck
59
Casey,the accountant for a small firm,pays the real estate taxes seven days before they are due.This represents which type of decision?

A) Satisficing
B) Programmed
C) Intuition
D) Nonprogrammed
E) Groupthink
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Dynamic Explosives is trying to decide whether or not to launch a new product nationally.This represents a(n)________________ decision.

A) programmed
B) intuitive
C) groupthink
D) nonprogrammed
E) satisficing
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Managers in biotechnology know that new drugs have a 10 percent chance of passing advanced clinical trials.This is an example of:

A) risk.
B) uncertainty.
C) bounded rationality.
D) incomplete information.
E) satisficing.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
When managers know the possible outcomes of a decision and can assign probabilities to each of these outcomes in terms of their likelihood of occurrence in the future,this is known as:

A) uncertainty.
B) certainty.
C) risk.
D) bounded rationality.
E) dialectical inquiry.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
The explosion of the space shuttle Challenger is an example of poor managerial decision making by the managers at NASA and Morton Thiokol,who considered and then downplayed the criterion of:

A) ethicalness.
B) practicality.
C) legality.
D) economic feasibility.
E) devil's advocacy.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Based on the work of March and Simon's administrative model of decision making,the first step in the managerial decision-making process is to:

A) choose among alternatives.
B) assess alternatives.
C) implement the chosen alternative.
D) recognize the need for a decision.
E) generate alternatives.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Patrick,a manager,is assessing possible alternatives for the solution of a problem.Patrick performs a cost-benefit analysis of several alternatives in order to determine the net financial payoff of each alternative.Which of the following criteria of decision making is Patrick implementing?

A) Economic feasibility
B) Practicality
C) Ethicalness
D) Legality
E) Dialectical inquiry
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
When the meaning of the information available to a manager is unclear and can be interpreted in several ways,the information is:

A) certain.
B) ambiguous.
C) bounded.
D) irrational.
E) dialectical.
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k this deck
67
When managers cannot assign probabilities of future occurrence to possible alternatives with a decision,this is known as:

A) certainty.
B) risk.
C) bounded rationality.
D) uncertainty.
E) dialectical inquiry.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
The purchasing manager for Telsa Motor Co.decides to call three suppliers of automobile windshields to ask for a bid on an order for 1,000 windshields for a new Ford car,instead of calling a hundred possible windshield suppliers for such a bid.What type of decision does this represent for the purchasing manager?

A) Nonprogrammed
B) Illusion of control
C) Certainty
D) Programmed
E) Satisficing
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k this deck
69
With reference to the steps of decision-making process,which of the following is the last step in the managerial decision-making process?

A) Generate alternatives
B) Learn from feedback
C) Recognize the need for a decision
D) Implement the chosen alternative
E) Choose among alternatives
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k this deck
70
A software firm is considering introducing a new product unlike any previously on the market.Managers cannot estimate the probability of success for the new product.Which of the following best describes the situation?

A) Risk
B) Uncertainty
C) Bounded rationality
D) Incomplete information
E) Satisficing
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Dale,a manager,is assessing possible alternatives for the solution of a quality problem in his department.As Dale does so,he attempts to determine if a possible alternative will threaten other company projects.Which of the following criteria of decision-making is being implemented by Dale?

A) Economic feasibility
B) Practicality
C) Legality
D) Ethicalness
E) Groupthink
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
An organization decides to ask three advertising agencies to pitch a proposal to handle the organization's business,instead of asking all of the advertising agencies in the city where this organization's headquarters are located to pitch the account.What type of decision does this represent?

A) Programmed
B) Nonprogrammed
C) Satisficing
D) Certainty
E) Illusion of control
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
A manager considers a limited sample of the potential alternative solutions for a problem and selects one that is acceptable instead of attempting to select the optimum solution.This type of decision is called:

A) programmed.
B) intuition.
C) certainty.
D) satisficing.
E) heuristics.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Margaret,a marketing manager,wants to budget the advertising for a new product launch.She is trying to determine the amount of money that her company can afford to spend on advertising this new product.In the context of decision-making,which of the following criteria of alternative courses of action is Margaret implementing?

A) Legality
B) Ethicalness
C) Economic feasibility
D) Practicality
E) Authenticity
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
75
The marketing managers of Rudolf Ltd. ,strive so hard to agree on an important decision to launch a product that they ignore information that a similar product already exists in the market and that the barriers to entry into the market are high.This refers to which of the following decision-making processes?

A) Dialectical inquiry
B) Devil's advocacy
C) Groupthink
D) Intuition
E) Representative bias
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
76
Cameron,a plant manager,wants to initiate a diversity training program in his plant.He is considering whether his department has enough extra people to cover for the time his employees will be engaged in the classes.Which of the following criteria of decision making is Cameron implementing?

A) Legality
B) Ethicalness
C) Devil's advocacy
D) Economic feasibility
E) Practicality
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Esteban,a manager,performs a financial analysis of several investment alternatives in order to determine which alternative is most likely to impact the organization's profitability.Esteban is focusing on:

A) bounded rationality.
B) ethicalness.
C) economic feasibility.
D) dialectical inquiry.
E) legality.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
The pattern of faulty and biased decision making that occurs in groups whose members strive for argument at the expense of good decision making is called:

A) brainstorming.
B) groupthink.
C) devil's advocacy.
D) bounded rationality.
E) satisficing.
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Kathleen,a manager,is attempting to determine whether she has both the capability and the resources to produce one of several possible new products.In the context of decision making,on which of the following criteria of alternative courses of action is Kathleen focusing?

A) Practicality
B) Ethicalness
C) Legality
D) Economic feasibility
E) Dialectical inquiry
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Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
When managers decide that they have the capabilities and resources required to implement an alternative,and they are sure that the alternative will not threaten the attainment of other organizational goals,they are focusing on which of the following criteria of alternative courses of action?

A) Legality
B) Ethicalness
C) Economic feasibility
D) Practicality
E) Authenticity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 113 flashcards in this deck.