✅ Bounded Rationality Approach
Proposed by: Herbert A. Simon
Year Introduced: 1957 (in his book “Administrative Behavior”)
🔹 Core Idea:
Humans are not perfectly rational. In reality, decision-makers face limited time, limited information, and limited mental capacity, so they cannot evaluate every option. Instead, they choose the first satisfactory solution — a concept known as “satisficing” (a mix of satisfy and suffice).
🔹 Key Features:
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Decisions are made under constraints (time, data, cognitive limits).
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Alternatives are not all evaluated; only a few are considered.
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The goal is adequacy, not perfection.
🔹 Example:
A manager hiring for a role quickly picks a candidate who is “good enough” instead of reviewing every possible applicant.
🔹 Best Used When:
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Information is incomplete or unclear.
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Quick decisions are needed.
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Resources for deep analysis are lacking.