{"id":1005,"date":"2014-05-28T10:18:14","date_gmt":"2014-05-28T06:18:14","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/englishbookgeorgia.com\/blogebg\/?p=1005"},"modified":"2014-11-19T14:05:12","modified_gmt":"2014-11-19T10:05:12","slug":"decision-making-types1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/englishbookgeorgia.com\/blogebg\/decision-making-types1\/","title":{"rendered":"Decision Making Types"},"content":{"rendered":"

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\"decisionDecision Making types. Which one are you?<\/b><\/p>\n

<\/b>You know you need great ideas, a critical mass of talent, and a decent amount of luck to build a successful business. But there’s something even more fundamental to putting together a smart organization.<\/p>\n

Before everything else, you, the founder, need an honest understanding of your strengths and weaknesses. Without it, you won’t know how to build a great supporting team.\u00a0One place to start is to look at how you make decisions.<\/p>\n

A new survey of about 5,000 McKinsey Quarterly<\/i> and\u00a0Harvard Business Review <\/i>readers might offer some insight.\u00a0After in-depth work on 1,021 of the responses, study authors Dan Lovallo and Olivier Sibony identified five decision-making styles. They are: Visionary, Guardian, Motivator, Flexible, and Catalyst.<\/p>\n

Each style is a combination of preferences from a set of six pairs of opposing characteristics:<\/p>\n

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