Decision Making Models Cheat Sheet.

Cheat Sheet Expanded Below:
1. Rational Decision-Making Model
Structured, analytical approach.
🔹 Steps:
-
Define the Problem – What are you trying to solve?
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Identify Criteria – What matters? (e.g., cost, time, quality)
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Weigh the Criteria – Assign importance to each factor
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Generate Alternatives – List all possible choices
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Evaluate Alternatives – Score each option
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Choose Best Option – Highest weighted score wins
✅ Use When:
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Clear goals and measurable criteria
-
Ample time and data
📌 Example:
Choosing between three vendors for a software solution.
🧠 2. OODA Loop (Observe, Orient, Decide, Act)
🔹 Loop Breakdown:
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Observe – Real-time data collection
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Orient – Contextual analysis: culture, experience, trends
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Decide – Choose based on orientation
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Act – Execute swiftly, then loop back
✅ Use When:
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Conditions are dynamic (e.g., markets, competitors)
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You need rapid, continuous adaptation
📌 Example:
Startup iterating a product based on customer feedback and competitor moves.
🚦 3. Eisenhower Matrix
Prioritize tasks by urgency and importance
| Urgent | Not Urgent | |
|---|---|---|
| Important | Do now (critical issues) | Schedule (strategic work) |
| Not Important | Delegate (busywork) | Eliminate (distractions) |
✅ Use When:
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You’re overwhelmed with tasks
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You want to focus on long-term priorities
📌 Example:
CEO prioritizing crisis resolution vs. long-term strategy sessions.
📊 4. SWOT Analysis
Strategic overview of internal and external factors
| Internal | External |
|---|---|
| Strengths – What are we good at? | Opportunities – Market trends, gaps |
| Weaknesses – Where are we weak? | Threats – Competitors, risks |
✅ Use When:
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Planning a product launch, expansion, or pivot
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Analyzing company or team capabilities
📌 Example:
Retailer evaluating entry into e-commerce.
🎯 5. SMART Goals
Framework for effective goal setting
| Attribute | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Specific | Clear & unambiguous (What exactly?) |
| Measurable | Can be tracked (How will you know?) |
| Achievable | Realistic given resources |
| Relevant | Tied to larger strategy |
| Time-bound | Has a clear deadline |
✅ Use When:
-
Defining KPIs, project goals, employee objectives
📌 Example:
“Reduce customer service response time by 30% in the next 90 days.”
💰 6. Cost-Benefit Analysis
Compare total expected costs and benefits of a decision
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Use ROI = (Benefit – Cost) / Cost
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Use Net Present Value (NPV) for long-term financial decisions
✅ Use When:
-
Justifying investments, budget planning, tech adoption
📌 Example:
Evaluating whether to build a custom AI tool or buy an off-the-shelf SaaS.
🧩 7. Mental Models for Thinking
Powerful thinking tools from psychology, economics, and systems theory.
| Model | Purpose |
|---|---|
| First Principles | Break down assumptions; build from fundamental truths |
| Inversion | Think backward: “What could cause failure?” |
| Second-order Thinking | Consider downstream consequences |
| Opportunity Cost | What do you give up when choosing something else? |
| 80/20 Rule (Pareto) | Focus on the 20% that delivers 80% of value |
✅ Use When:
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Facing ambiguity or complexity
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Strategic and critical thinking required
📌 Example:
Deciding whether to pivot a product based on second-order effects.
📈 8. Data-Driven Decision Making (DDDM)
Base choices on data insights rather than gut instinct
🔹 Steps:
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Identify objective or KPI
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Collect clean, relevant data
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Analyze (descriptive, diagnostic, predictive)
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Interpret insights – Add human context
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Act, then monitor results
✅ Use When:
-
Business optimization, A/B testing, operational decisions
📌 Example:
Using customer churn analytics to decide retention strategies.
🌳 9. Decision Trees
Visual decision model showing paths and outcomes
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Helps weigh probabilities, costs, and consequences
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Ideal for structured yet uncertain decisions
✅ Use When:
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Evaluating multiple “what if” options
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Risk vs reward trade-offs
📌 Example:
Insurance company pricing policy options based on customer profiles.
🎲 10. Monte Carlo Simulation
Simulate thousands of scenarios to model uncertainty
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Uses probability distributions instead of fixed inputs
-
Ideal for forecasting, financial risk, operations planning
✅ Use When:
-
You need to assess risk under uncertainty
📌 Example:
Forecasting project completion times under varying resource constraints.
🎩 11. Six Thinking Hats (Edward de Bono)
Use multiple perspectives to solve problems or make decisions
| Hat Color | Thinking Mode |
|---|---|
| 🧢 Blue | Process control (facilitator role) |
| ⚪ White | Facts, data |
| 🔴 Red | Emotions, gut feelings |
| ⚫ Black | Risk, caution |
| 🟡 Yellow | Optimism, benefits |
| 🟢 Green | Creativity, new ideas |
✅ Use When:
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Team decisions, group brainstorming
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Want balanced discussion
📌 Example:
Product team evaluating whether to launch a controversial feature.
🧠 Pro Tips for Better Decision-Making:
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Use multiple models together (e.g., SWOT + DDDM)
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Document assumptions to review later
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Bias check: Be aware of confirmation bias, sunk cost fallacy
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Ask “What problem are we really solving?”
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