Phillips, Lawrence D.
(2006)
Decision conferencing.
Operational Research working papers (LSEOR 06.85).
Operational Research Group, Department of Management, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK.
ISBN 0753020777
Abstract
This chapter presents the current status of the decision conference process, a way of helping a group of key players to resolve important issues in their organization by working together, under the guidance of an impartial facilitator, with the aid of a decision analysis model of participants’ perspectives on the issues, developed on-the-spot over a period of two days. The facilitator serves as a process consultant, guiding the group through the stages of discussing the issues, developing a model and exploring the results, without contributing to the content of discussions. The model serves as a ‘tool for thinking,’ not as providing an optimal solution or ‘the right answer.’ Participants are encouraged to express their sense of unease at any stage in the process, for it is the discrepancy between model results and intuitive judgment that drives the dialectic in the group. Exploration generates new insights and stimulates creative thinking, resulting in changes to the model and to intuitions. As this process settles down, participants develop a shared understanding of the issues, generate a sense of common purpose, and gain commitment to the way forward. Two case studies illustrate a typical individual decision conference and how sustained engagement with a client, decision conferencing, can lead to committed alignment in a group. Research on decision conferences provides insights into why decision conferences work.
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