Pending archive per /wiki/spaces/AH/pages/3378970638


There are, you might recall, five ways to make a decision: Authoritarian (I make it); Consultative (I collect informed opinions before making it); Consensus (we don’t all agree with the decision but do all agree to it); Democratic (we vote, the majority wins, and the minority pretends to accept it); and Delegated (someone else gets to make it). By Bob Lewis

Axelerant has several decision-making forms that typically consider the person to raise the topic to own deciding what to do. Though how they reach that choice might be casual or by in-depth conversations.

First Off, Don’t be Afraid to Decide

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-SbRExnMLc&t=1s

The Simplest Version

Always act in Axelerant’s best interest in line with our Principles and Values.

The Short Version

As many decisions are reversible, get feedback from relevant peers within just enough time and make a good-enough decision that’s not consensus-driven. Afterward, retrospect and iterate. When there are differences, disagree, yet commit towards keeping us moving forward aligned by Principles and Values.

The Long Version

Our intention is for an organization-wide decision-making framework that's consistently applicable for low to high impact and value situations that our people, programs, and projects encounter. It's not meant to be considered the only decision-making mechanism at Axelerant, solely the most common for quickly moving forward with acceptable outcomes.

Therefore, our decision-making framework isn't about finding the perfect option but the most relevant, good enough next step within a reasonably acceptable timeframe.

  1. Whoever initiates a discussion is considered as the decision-maker or directly responsible individual (DRI)

  2. Decisions must align with Axelerant's purpose, mission, and culture, and then they should align with the strategies of the relevant departments and service areas.

  3. DRI must facilitate a good general conversation with relevant stakeholders

  4. DRI can use #disc- Conversation Creator to help with creating a Slack discussion channel

  5. DRI considers the conversation feedback and makes their decision

  6. DRI or a delegated to person leads the decision execution

Decision-Making Tips