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The effects of managerial decision making behavior and order book size on workload control system implementation in make-to-order companies

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The effects of managerial decision making behavior and order book size on workload control system implementation in make-to-order companies. / Stevenson, Mark; Vanharanta, Markus.
In: Production Planning and Control, Vol. 26, No. 2, 2015, p. 97-115.

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@article{f5980595a2c74e978671f95a10f1c00a,
title = "The effects of managerial decision making behavior and order book size on workload control system implementation in make-to-order companies",
abstract = "Insufficient attention has been paid to behavioural influences on the implementation of the {\textquoteleft}Workload Control{\textquoteright} (WLC) concept – a Production Planning and Control (PPC) approach for small and medium sized Make-To-Order companies – and there is an implicit assumption that managers are rationalistic in their decision-making. This paper analyses the effects of both managerial decision-making behaviour and the size of a company{\textquoteright}s order book, affecting the number of decisions that have to be made, on two case study implementations of a WLC system. The Recognition-Primed Decision (RPD) model from the Naturalistic Decision-Making literature is used to unpack the first case where implementation failed. This highlighted a misalignment between how the company{\textquoteright}s owner-manager initially made operational decisions and how a rationalistic WLC system functions. But the company is studied over six years, allowing us to show how the owner-manager was forced to transition from the RPD model to a more rationalistic approach to PPC as the size of the order book increased. A second case study is then briefly presented in which WLC system implementation was successful; the RPD model was not strongly evident and the size of the order book was greater to begin with. The paper helps to understand the decision-making behaviour of managers in small companies and how it may conflict or be misaligned with the rationalistic assumptions underpinning the WLC concept. This provides a possible explanation for why few successful implementations of the concept have been presented in literature.",
keywords = "naturalistic decision-making, recognition-primed decisions , workload control , implementation",
author = "Mark Stevenson and Markus Vanharanta",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1080/09537287.2013.856493",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "97--115",
journal = "Production Planning and Control",
issn = "0953-7287",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The effects of managerial decision making behavior and order book size on workload control system implementation in make-to-order companies

AU - Stevenson, Mark

AU - Vanharanta, Markus

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Insufficient attention has been paid to behavioural influences on the implementation of the ‘Workload Control’ (WLC) concept – a Production Planning and Control (PPC) approach for small and medium sized Make-To-Order companies – and there is an implicit assumption that managers are rationalistic in their decision-making. This paper analyses the effects of both managerial decision-making behaviour and the size of a company’s order book, affecting the number of decisions that have to be made, on two case study implementations of a WLC system. The Recognition-Primed Decision (RPD) model from the Naturalistic Decision-Making literature is used to unpack the first case where implementation failed. This highlighted a misalignment between how the company’s owner-manager initially made operational decisions and how a rationalistic WLC system functions. But the company is studied over six years, allowing us to show how the owner-manager was forced to transition from the RPD model to a more rationalistic approach to PPC as the size of the order book increased. A second case study is then briefly presented in which WLC system implementation was successful; the RPD model was not strongly evident and the size of the order book was greater to begin with. The paper helps to understand the decision-making behaviour of managers in small companies and how it may conflict or be misaligned with the rationalistic assumptions underpinning the WLC concept. This provides a possible explanation for why few successful implementations of the concept have been presented in literature.

AB - Insufficient attention has been paid to behavioural influences on the implementation of the ‘Workload Control’ (WLC) concept – a Production Planning and Control (PPC) approach for small and medium sized Make-To-Order companies – and there is an implicit assumption that managers are rationalistic in their decision-making. This paper analyses the effects of both managerial decision-making behaviour and the size of a company’s order book, affecting the number of decisions that have to be made, on two case study implementations of a WLC system. The Recognition-Primed Decision (RPD) model from the Naturalistic Decision-Making literature is used to unpack the first case where implementation failed. This highlighted a misalignment between how the company’s owner-manager initially made operational decisions and how a rationalistic WLC system functions. But the company is studied over six years, allowing us to show how the owner-manager was forced to transition from the RPD model to a more rationalistic approach to PPC as the size of the order book increased. A second case study is then briefly presented in which WLC system implementation was successful; the RPD model was not strongly evident and the size of the order book was greater to begin with. The paper helps to understand the decision-making behaviour of managers in small companies and how it may conflict or be misaligned with the rationalistic assumptions underpinning the WLC concept. This provides a possible explanation for why few successful implementations of the concept have been presented in literature.

KW - naturalistic decision-making

KW - recognition-primed decisions

KW - workload control

KW - implementation

U2 - 10.1080/09537287.2013.856493

DO - 10.1080/09537287.2013.856493

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 97

EP - 115

JO - Production Planning and Control

JF - Production Planning and Control

SN - 0953-7287

IS - 2

ER -