Decision Sciences Journal
Volume 29, Number 1
Winter 1998
Participation in Strategic Decision Making:
The Role of Organizational Predisposition and Issue Interpretation
Donde P. Ashmos and Dennis Duchon
Division of Management and Marketing, The University of Texas at San Antonio,
San Antonio, TX 78249-0634, email: dashmos@pclan.utsa.edu/dduchon@pclan.utsa.edu
Reuben R. McDaniel, Jr.
Department of Management and Information Systems, The University of Texas
at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, email: mcdaniel@mail.utexas.edu
Abstract: Each time managers are faced with a strategic decision
they decide how to decide. Specifically, they make choices about who has
necessary information and, therefore, who needs to participate in the decision.
Such responses to strategic issues are believed to be affected by the way
in which decision makers interpret issues. However, organizations develop
habitual responses to issues and may be predisposed because of their attention
to rules and routines, or because of past performance, to respond to strategic
issues in certain ways regardless of how issues are interpreted. We examined
the direct and indirect effects of predisposition (rule orientation and
past financial performance) and interpretation of strategic issues on the
participation of internal stakeholder groups in strategic decision making.
Executives in 52 organizations indicated that rule orientation and performance
are directly linked to participation in strategic decision making, and that
interpretation and rule orientation are directly linked to each other. Implications
for managers include the notion that any effort to improve decision-making
effectiveness by shaping how organizational members frame and interpret
issues will be constrained by the organizations existing routines
as well as its past performance.
Subject Areas: Interpretation, Participation, and Strategic Decision
Making.
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