Free Term Papers on Personal Perspective Paper

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> Business >> Personal Perspective Paper

We have many free term papers and essays on Personal Perspective Paper. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Personal Perspective Paper Week 2

    Personal Perspective Paper Week 2. Running head: PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE PAPER
    WEEK 2 Personal Perspective Paper Week 2 Harold Rice, Jr. ...

  2. Personal Perspective Paper

    Personal Perspective Paper. ... Personal Perspective Paper 4 References Jeter, L. (2005,
    April 04). So, you want to earn an MBA? Better do the homework. ...

  3. Personal Perspective Paper

    PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE PAPER. Running head: PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE PAPER Personal
    Perspective Paper University of Phoenix Personal Perspective ...

  4. Personal Perspective Paper

    Personal Perspective Paper. PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE PAPER Personal Perspective
    Paper Semo Veavea Jr. University of Phoenix Personal ...

  5. Personal Perspective Paper

    Personal Perspective Paper. Running head: PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE PAPER Personal
    Perspective Paper Denise Bivens University of Phoenix ...

View More Papers...

Personal Perspective Paper

Submitted by acleste on April 3, 2007

Category: Business
Words: 931 | Pages: 4
Views: 194
Popularity Rank: 63,191
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Running Head: DECISION-MAKING MODELS

My Experience with Decision-Making Models

Angela Lester

University of Phoenix






Figure 1.

In today’s society, everybody makes decisions. It's a natural part of life and most of the time, we don't even think about the process. In an organization, decisions are made at every level. The level at which the decision is made can also determine the complexity of the decision in relation to the input of data and output of information.
Additionally, history clearly shows the decision-maker who best analyzes, decides, and controls the pace of interaction with an opponent will prevail, whether that opponent is an unthinking force of nature or a thinking human. To represent the functions performed during decision-making, researchers have traditionally used a process model similar to the OODA Loop (Observe, Orient, Decide, and Act). This model (Figure 1) represents decision making as a series of steps or stages (Flin, Salas, Strub, Martin, 2001).
In essence, some decisions are very structured while others are primarily unstructured. For example, I may wake up in the morning and make the structured, routine decision to get out of bed. Then I am forced to make the unstructured decision of what clothes to wear that day (for some of us this may be an incredibly routine decision). Structured decisions involve definite procedures and are not necessarily very complex (Howard, 2003). Yet, the more unstructured a decision becomes, the more complex it becomes.
Likewise, there are stages of decision-making. Some people seem to make sudden or impulsive decisions. Other people seem to make extremely slow, deliberate decisions. Regardless of appearances, the decision-making process follows the same stages of development and implementation. For the most...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!