ABSTRACT

In the knowledge economy, teams play a central role in decisions made within and across organisations. The reason why teams with diverse compositions are often used is arguably their ability to develop solutions that none of their members could have produced alone. Systems design, strategy and policy development, risk management, and innovation are just a few of the areas that call for team decisions. Unfortunately, a considerable number of behavioural research studies show that teamwork is fraught with difficulties. Teams often underestimate their fallibility, struggle with conflict, or are unable to share and integrate critical information effectively. Indeed, the evidence shows that two out of three teams do not achieve their goals and half of organisational decisions – many of which are team decisions – fail.

In this book, the authors draw from research in psychology, decision and systems sciences – as well as their own research and consulting work that spans more than 20 years – to show how designed interventions can enable team decision making to become rigorous, transparent, and defensible. They cover theory and practice regarding the design, delivery, and evaluation of interventions to support team decision making in situations of varied complexity. Written as an applied resource for researchers and advanced students in particular, this book offers a guide to proven interventions that enhance the process of making team decisions and increase the chances of superior team results.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

part |49 pages

Are more heads better than one?

chapter 1|12 pages

Decision making traps

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chapter 2|18 pages

Motivated team decision making

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chapter 3|17 pages

Interventions to support team decisions

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part II|114 pages

An overview of selected interventions

chapter 4|19 pages

Group model building

Understanding complex behaviour
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chapter 5|13 pages

Application

Building the business model of Sioo management education
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chapter 6|17 pages

Participatory scenario development

Thinking about the future
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chapter 7|15 pages

Application

Understanding possible futures of Nijmegen municipality
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chapter 8|10 pages

Group causal mapping

Clarifying issues, understanding purpose and developing options
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chapter 9|13 pages

Application

Prioritising projects to tackle teenage pregnancies in a multi-cultural neighbourhood (part I)
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chapter 10|12 pages

Decision conferencing

Articulating value preferences and trade-offs
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chapter 11|13 pages

Application

Prioritising projects to tackle teenage pregnancies in a multi-cultural neighbourhood (part II)
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part III|65 pages

Performing interventions

chapter 12|19 pages

Design choices

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chapter 13|14 pages

Basics of facilitation

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chapter 14|16 pages

Managing process and content

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chapter 15|14 pages

Managing conflict and emotion

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part IV|44 pages

Researching interventions

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