Decision-Making: The Art of Making Better Choices in Business

Every day in the workplace, managers face countless decisions. Some choices are minor, while others can shape a team’s or project's future. Yet even experienced leaders struggle with this. A 2023 Oracle study found that 85% of business leaders regret or question decisions they have made, and 72% say the sheer volume of data has stopped them from deciding at all.

Nonetheless, the ability to make effective decisions, particularly under pressure, is an essential skill for any leader. However, many mid-career professionals discover that as their roles expand, the complexity of their decisions increases significantly.

To make confident and clear decisions, it's essential to grasp what the process involves. This guide will walk you through the key aspects of decision-making, present frameworks that make things easier, and offer strategies to help you tackle tough choices with greater assurance and less stress.

What is Decision-Making?

Decision-making is the process of recognising a problem or opportunity, evaluating your options, and choosing a course of action. In a professional setting, it draws on critical thinking, problem-solving, and judgement—often with incomplete information and real consequences.

Not all decisions carry the same weight. Most business decisions fall into one of three categories:

Decision Type

What It Involves

Example

Strategic

Long-term choices that shape the direction of the business

Entering a new market or launching a new product line

Tactical

How resources are allocated to meet strategic goals

Deciding how to divide the budget across departments

Operational

Day-to-day choices that keep things running

Approving a supplier invoice or assigning weekly tasks

Understanding the type of decision you’re dealing with helps you decide how much time and input it warrants, as well as who should be involved.

Decision-Making Frameworks Commonly Used in Business

Frameworks give you a structure to follow when a decision feels overwhelming or when the stakes are high. Here are four widely used ones:

Framework

What It Does

SWOT Analysis

Maps strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to give a fuller picture before deciding

Cost-Benefit Analysis

Weighs the potential gains of a decision against the costs and risks involved

DECIDE Model

A six-step process: Define, Establish criteria, Consider alternatives, Identify the best option, Develop a plan, Evaluate

Pareto Analysis

Focuses effort on the 20% of causes that drive 80% of outcomes—useful for prioritising under pressure

Each framework suits different situations. For a deeper look at how to apply them, see our article on the top five decision-making models that make you a better decision-maker.

Strategies to Improve Your Decision-Making

Common Challenges for Mid-Career Decision Makers

As managers move into more senior roles, the decisions get harder—not just because the stakes are higher, but because of how they feel. Common pain points include:

  • Decision fatigue: After a long day of smaller calls, your ability to think clearly on bigger ones drops. Research shows that the quality of decisions tends to decline as mental energy depletes.
  • Analysis paralysis: Too much information, or too much fear of getting it wrong, can lead to stalling rather than acting.
  • Confidence gaps: Mid-career professionals often doubt their own judgement, particularly when managing people older or more experienced than themselves.
  • Confirmation bias: The tendency to favour information that supports what we already believe  and unconsciously dismiss what challenges it.

Practical Techniques to Make Better Decisions

A few habits make a real difference over time:

  • Set a decision deadline: Open-ended decisions tend to stay open. Giving yourself a clear cut-off, even if it’s an informal one, reduces overthinking.
  • Separate the decision from the outcome: A good process can still produce a bad result, and a bad process can get lucky. Judging yourself on whether you decided well, not just whether it worked out, builds steadier confidence.
  • Use data, but balance it with judgement: Data-driven decision-making helps reduce bias and gut-feel errors, but data rarely tells the full story. The best managers know when to lean on numbers and when to factor in context.
  • Involve the right people: Emotional intelligence, like knowing whose perspective matters and how to draw it out, often determines whether a decision lands well with a team.
  • Review past decisions: A quick, honest look at what worked and what didn’t is one of the fastest ways to sharpen your judgement over time.

If decision fatigue is something you recognise in yourself or your team, our article on why it happens and how to navigate it goes into more detail.

Decision-Making Styles and Their Impact on Teams

How a manager makes decisions—not just what they decide—shapes how a team feels about their work. The four main styles are autocratic, democratic, transformational, and laissez-faire, and each has a different effect on motivation, speed, and accountability.

Style

How Decisions Are Made Best Suited To Key Risk

In Malaysian Workplaces

Autocratic

Leader decides alone Crisis or highly regulated environments Low morale, limited buy-in

Common in traditional hierarchies; can stifle junior voices

Democratic

Team gives input; leader decides Diverse teams where buy-in matters Slower decisions

Effective in inclusive cultures; may be seen as indecisive in rigid structures

Transformational

Leader motivates team to achieve extraordinary outcomes

Creating a sustainable culture of growth

Oversight on daily operational details

Must be adapted to navigate specific cultural norms

Laissez-Faire

Team decides independently

Experienced, self-motivated teams

Accountability gaps

Works in tech and creative sectors; risky without clear goals

Most effective leaders don’t stick to one style. They read the situation and adjust. To explore how leadership styles connect to a broader management approach, see our guide to the four types of leadership styles.

Building Stronger Decision-Making Skills

Good decision-making is not about always getting it right. It’s about having a clear enough process that you can act with confidence, learn from the outcome, and do better next time. For mid-career professionals, it is a skill worth developing intentionally—not only through practical experience. 

If you want to build this as a formal competency, consider Sunway University’s postgraduate programmes which are 100% online and MQA-accredited, meaning they are designed for professionals who want to grow without stepping away from their careers.

Get in touch with our Education Counsellors today to determine the best postgraduate programme for your needs.