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Alternatives

Psychology of Personal Decision-Making. #1. #2. Alternatives. #3. Zero Points. Frame of reference is damn important : EX: waterfalls and the desert Sorrow and difficulty lower the bar Simple things enable us to better appreciate life E.g. – losing a limb

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Alternatives

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  1. Psychology of Personal Decision-Making #1 #2 Alternatives #3

  2. Zero Points • Frame of reference is damn important : • EX: waterfalls and the desert • Sorrow and difficulty lower the bar • Simple things enable us to better appreciate life • E.g. – losing a limb • Good fortune/comfort raises the reference point • Comforts which used to give us pleasure are needed to remain neutral or avoid pain • Cost to pleasure and benefit in pain • Moving up is NOT as important as moving down

  3. Creative Thinking about Alternatives • Win/win alternatives are best! • Analysis of: • Values • Causes • Resources • Alternatives checklists

  4. Only 2 Alternatives? • Usually this means you’ve got more work to do!

  5. Analysis of Values • Use your values (one at a time) to come up with different alternatives • Get more this way • Also higher quality #1 #2 #3

  6. Analysis of Values + Efficiency • Helps when your values are SPECIFIC • Focus on values which eliminate greatest number of alternatives • EX: buying a new laptop  affordability • Focus on the most important values • Rank order if necessary • Carrying Weight – 1 • Battery Life – 2 • Performance – 3

  7. Analysis of Values • Get clear about where you want to BE or GO and then work backwards • EXERCISE: Speeding up time to work backwards!

  8. Analysis of Values • Imagine 200 years from now your very great grandchildren find an article about you in the Wikipedia. What does that article say about you? What kind of person were you? What did you do with your life?

  9. Analysis of Alternatives • Think about attributes of alternatives • Get more alternatives!

  10. Analysis of Causes • 4 sisters bereave death of a millionaire • 3 of them get $330,000 apiece in gold, the fourth gets $10,000 worth of stamps • Sister is pissed, what to do? • Embarrass sisters • Seek assistance of Italians • Sue

  11. Fundamental Attribution Error • Beware the FAE! • Thermostat was too low!

  12. FAE • Focus on situations, not people’s dispositions • More EX: Electroshock, Prison Guards, Nazis, etc.

  13. Analysis of Resources • MacGyver!!!

  14. Analysis of Resources • Make use of what is around you to come up with novel alternatives • Objects – tree stumps • People – sages nearby • Career choices: • “types of jobs near here” • “income potential” • SWOT Analysis

  15. Alternatives Checklist • We been here before: • - Importance • - Uncertainty • + Hope • More coming in “uncertainty” (of course)

  16. Classification & Sub Problems • Group many competing alternatives into larger buckets EX: School choices • Decide on those buckets instead • Eliminate lots of confusing info that way! • Sub-Problems • What do you want your wedding to accomplish? • Break apart and conquer

  17. Well Structured Alternatives • Criteria: • At least 2 alternatives (preferably more) • Mutually exclusive • ONE path, not meandering into another possible solution at the same time • Substantially differing alternatives

  18. The day of stupid ideas starts… now! • Ask: • What is “good” about this stupid idea? • Avoid negative criticism • Simply stops thoughts • Try keeping your thought stream open

  19. What this looks like (use for BIG picture problems) Force Fit Selection Stupid Idea “Stepping Stone” Potential Solution Evaluate Solutions Don’t Judge Only Positive Thoughts Positive and Negative Thoughts

  20. Developing Alternatives! • Values analysis • Work backward to alternatives • Attribute analysis • Can you combine to create “win-win”? • Causal analysis • Asking “Why” 5 times • Resource analysis • What alternatives could be in the immediate environment?

  21. Creative Group Alternative Development! • Break into teams of 5 • Choose a recorder • Choose a moderator • Moderator makes sure people DON’T evaluate! • Keep it sequential – can say “pass” • Keep it playful! • Doodle, make airplanes, smile

  22. Block busting warmup • Functional fixation… is bad. Pick one! 25 uses

  23. Warmup part deux! • How to heata house more efficiently • How to light a house with a single bulb

  24. Attribute Analysis • 80 million roundish ball bearings • “What can I do with 80 million of these?” • Roundish, heavy, metal, smooth, shiny, hard, magnetizable • “What can I do with 80 million things”? • Conduct electricity • Magnetize them • Melt em’ • Make tools with them metal

  25. Attribute Analysis cont’d • Attribute discovery checklist: • Physical: color, weight, material, speed, odor, size • Psychological: appearance, symbolism, emotion (“happy smell of detergent”) • Functional: intended use, how it does what it does • People: who’s involved?

  26. Morphological Analysis • List the attributes as before • Under each attribute, list all alternatives you can think of • Choose an alternative from each column and assemble choices into a new idea. • Rinse and repeat!

  27. Morphological Analysis • EX: Develop a better band-aid • Current attributes are in bold below:

  28. Morphological Analysis – Your Turn! • Improve your date night • Improve your relationship with your sig. other • Improve your desk job

  29. GIVE ME NOUNS! • Beach • Jalepeno • House • Car • Pool • Bison • Rock • Scissors

  30. GIVE ME ACTION VERBS! • Attack • Smile • Chase • EEEeat • Surrender • Dance • Sleeping • Listen

  31. Picks • Group 1: Car // Dance • Group 2: • Group 3: • Group 4: • Group 5:

  32. Force Fit - Generate 10 ideas for: • Improve a marriage • Roommate situation where people are messy

  33. Reversal • The reverse is also true! • EX: “a teacher instructing students” • Reversed: • “students instruct teacher” • “teacher UN-instructing students” • “students instructing themselves” • “teacher instructing self”

  34. REVERSAL – Your Turn! • How can I find a job? • How can student afford travel? • How can management improve the store? • The store is being hurt by competition. • Clerk helping customer • How can student improve writing ability? • How can society solve drug problem?

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