Most individuals and businesses try to find the most "logical" solution to obstacles by doing research or looking at reviews before coming to a decision. Western cultures also value everyone having a say and the most popular choice wins. Combine the two and you get the quote, "Logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few." So it's no surprise that VPs and managers might vote to choose new company initiatives.
And in a lot of ways "getting a vote" is a good thing. The accounting department doesn't always know what the sales department needs or values and vice versa. Plus it boosts employee morale for being getting involved in decisions. So what's wrong with taking a vote? It's pretty quick and easy to send out a poll or hold a meeting, and it's worked in the past, right?
The truth is, people are imperfect beings. There are plenty of obstacles that get in the way of rational reasoning such as cognitive bias, sunk cost fallacy, or deciding with emotions and backing up with logic later. Something as simple as maybe you don't want the local Italian restaurant to cater your next company meeting a month from now, simply because you had Italian food for dinner yesterday, and therefore it doesn't sound appetizing right now. Even though it might otherwise be your best option.
While it’s possible to hold a vote for stakeholders, they might not make the most sound decision, or even pick the decision that truly holds all of their values.
Instead, we should turn to mathematical frameworks that will do the logical work for us, such as the Analytical Hierarchy Process. The Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) helps teams and individuals find the best solution to their problem with “a comprehensive and rational framework for structuring a decision problem, for representing and quantifying its elements, for relating those elements to overall goals, and for evaluating alternative solutions.”
Essentially, AHP will do all of the calculations for you, ranking the most optimal choices for each individual. And the results may not always be what you’d expect if it was a simple poll where you pick a choice. Back to our example - if you took a vote, Italian food would be your last choice. But if you had to judge it by all the other criteria (wide variety, vegetarian options, etc.) instead of your gut reaction, you'd realize the flaws in your thinking. Now imagine what you're forgetting about when making more complex decisions.
But how can you actually use AHP? We've created Prioritization Helper, a Salesforce app that facilitates group decisions. This tool is great for all kinds of scenarios, including hiring a candidate from a group interview, software selection, or deciding what events to sponsor. Here are more Prioritization Helper use case suggestions.
How it works:
To actually evaluate the comparisons:
Here's an example of the process:
Stop sending SurveyMonkey links or taking a head count on the important decisions. You may have survived this long without a decision making app, but the shift to more mathematical reasoning is impactful for successful projects. And the best part is decision makers still get a "vote" on what matters to them, but with more quantifiable data behind it.