Course Content
Management Foundations
Management: Concept, Process, Theories, and Approaches, Management Roles and Skills
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Management Functions
Functions: Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Coordinating, and Controlling
0/3
Managerial Economics Foundations
Managerial Economics: Concept and Importance
0/2
National Income
National Income: Concept, Types, and Measurement
0/2
Unit I : Evaluation
Unit I : Evaluation
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Unit I: Business Management and Managerial Economics

Decision Making is the process of selecting the best course of action from multiple alternatives to achieve a desired outcome or solve a problem.

 

Approach Key Features Strengths Limitations Best Used When
Rational Decision-Making Logical, step-by-step, evaluates all alternatives Objective, thorough, maximizes outcomes Time-consuming, assumes full information Structured problems with clear data
Bounded Rationality Limited information and cognitive capacity, satisficing Realistic, practical May miss better alternatives Real-world, routine decisions with constraints
Intuitive Decision-Making Based on gut feeling and experience Fast, efficient in uncertain conditions Subjective, may lead to bias Unstructured or time-pressured environments
Garbage Can Model Random mix of problems, solutions, and participants Reflects chaotic real-life decision environments Unpredictable, lacks rational structure Ambiguous or loosely structured organizations
Political Decision-Making Influenced by power, coalitions, and negotiation Addresses hidden agendas and interests Can lead to conflict or manipulation Large firms, government, or political settings
Incremental (Muddling Through) Small, gradual changes rather than bold decisions Low risk, flexible, adaptive May lack innovation or vision Complex, evolving situations
Participative / Group Decision Involves team or stakeholder collaboration Diverse input, better acceptance Time-consuming, potential for groupthink When consensus and buy-in are important