A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING

The “PQ” problem was published in 1990 by Goldratt. An adapted version of this problem is provided to master’s level students a few weeks before starting an operations management course. The performance statistics collected from three South African (since 2016) and one European business school (from...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pretorius, Pieter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stellenbosch University 2019-11-01
Series:South African Journal of Industrial Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://sajie.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/2228
id doaj-ca6971f926df462292784b42a249adad
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ca6971f926df462292784b42a249adad2020-11-25T01:35:07ZengStellenbosch UniversitySouth African Journal of Industrial Engineering1012-277X2224-78902019-11-01303778910.7166/30-3-2228A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKINGPretorius, Pieter 0Independent Educator and ConsultantThe “PQ” problem was published in 1990 by Goldratt. An adapted version of this problem is provided to master’s level students a few weeks before starting an operations management course. The performance statistics collected from three South African (since 2016) and one European business school (from 2018 onwards) do not make for good reading. To date, only 2.3 per cent of the students (42 students from the sample of 1 866 students) were able to answer both questions correctly; and some of them were not able to justify their correct decisions. This paper will explore the differences between traditional, cost-based methods of decision-making for day-to-day operational and improvement decisions as practised by many companies today — and hence the bad performance by the students — and taking a systems approach to decision-making. The paper will argue for taking the systems approach as a real alternative, without which alternative realities will remain but a dream. http://sajie.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/2228organisational decision-makingbusiness decision-makingoperational decision-makingcost-based decision-makingtraditional decision-making
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pretorius, Pieter
spellingShingle Pretorius, Pieter
A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING
South African Journal of Industrial Engineering
organisational decision-making
business decision-making
operational decision-making
cost-based decision-making
traditional decision-making
author_facet Pretorius, Pieter
author_sort Pretorius, Pieter
title A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING
title_short A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING
title_full A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING
title_fullStr A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING
title_full_unstemmed A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO OPERATIONAL AND BUSINESS DECISION-MAKING
title_sort systems approach to operational and business decision-making
publisher Stellenbosch University
series South African Journal of Industrial Engineering
issn 1012-277X
2224-7890
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The “PQ” problem was published in 1990 by Goldratt. An adapted version of this problem is provided to master’s level students a few weeks before starting an operations management course. The performance statistics collected from three South African (since 2016) and one European business school (from 2018 onwards) do not make for good reading. To date, only 2.3 per cent of the students (42 students from the sample of 1 866 students) were able to answer both questions correctly; and some of them were not able to justify their correct decisions. This paper will explore the differences between traditional, cost-based methods of decision-making for day-to-day operational and improvement decisions as practised by many companies today — and hence the bad performance by the students — and taking a systems approach to decision-making. The paper will argue for taking the systems approach as a real alternative, without which alternative realities will remain but a dream.
topic organisational decision-making
business decision-making
operational decision-making
cost-based decision-making
traditional decision-making
url http://sajie.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/2228
work_keys_str_mv AT pretoriuspieter asystemsapproachtooperationalandbusinessdecisionmaking
AT pretoriuspieter systemsapproachtooperationalandbusinessdecisionmaking
_version_ 1725068389352734720