Thursday Nov 06, 2025
Friday, 1 August 2014 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Learning and developing decision-making skills must become a required focus for every leader and high-potential employee. These skills can be honed through a combination of formal and informal processes.
Experiential learning: This type of hands-on learning--business simulations, role-playing, case studies--is favored to a high/very high extent by 32% more high-performance organisations than lower-performance firms as an approach for accelerating leadership development, according to i4cp’s How High-Performance Organisations Accelerate Executive Leadership Development. For example, games/exercises provide a fun way to reinforce important decision-making concepts. Firms such as i4cp member Microsoft Corporation, Procter & Gamble, Qwest Communications, and Hewlett-Packard have participated in such programs with Peak Experiences International, Inc., just one of the companies providing experiential learning activities such as a maze experience using strategic planning and collaborative decision-making.
Coaching: Coaching was found to be the leadership development tool most highly correlated to market performance in i4cp’s Accelerating the Path to Leadership survey. Additionally, The People-Profit Chain™ report references a Harvard Business Review article highlighting Chevron’s group of decision analysis experts that has trained over 2,500 decision-makers through multi-day workshops and certified over 10,000 more through its online training module; the group also coordinates data gathering, builds and refines analytical models, and coaches decision-makers.
Informal learning: This mode of learning is becoming increasingly important, according to i4cp’s The Top 10 Critical Human Capital Issues: Enabling Sustained Growth through Talent Transparency. Informal learning may occur through daily interactions and shared relationships or through social learning, such as microblogs and online communities of practice.
Decision-making in its simplest form is enhanced by helping employees learn institutional knowledge. For example, an i4cp study conducted in partnership with American Society for Training and Development (ASTD), Informal Learning: The Social Evolution, found that informal learning is effective for determining such things as: who the go-to people are for specific information; the names, faces, titles, and responsibilities of key personnel; and how to get things done from a process standpoint.
Culture
The facilitation of decision-making must be supported by an organisational culture that encourages accountability and shared knowledge so that leaders can make and execute their decisions.
Accountability: A key differentiator in leadership, according to The People-Profit Chain, is in holding managers accountable for the development and engagement of their direct reports. This includes ensuring that employees have access to training in decision-making and are encouraged to enroll in such learning opportunities through performance management discussions and the creation of personal development plans.
Shared knowledge: To ensure broad access to the collective wisdom of the workforce, organisations must provide a means for gathering and sharing information and insights. The i4cp report How High-Performance Organisations Accelerate Executive Leadership Development presents, for example, how i4cp member The Boeing Company uses an internally-developed online application to support collaboration and knowledge transfer across the enterprise as independently contributed content, or as groups. The Facebook-like application includes contributions from subject matter experts and communities of practice.
It is often said that “knowledge is power,” but according to i4cp, knowledge that is collective, collaborative, and continuous is unstoppable.