Autocratic decision making
Autocratic decision making is a technique where one authorized individual makes a decision for the group based on available information. It is useful when speed, accountability, or confidentiality outweigh the need for broad consensus.
Key Points
- One authorized individual makes the decision and accepts accountability.
- Best suited for urgent, high-stakes, or compliance-driven choices.
- Can include rapid consultation, but consensus is not required.
- Minimizes decision latency and clarifies direction.
- Risks lower buy-in and blind spots if stakeholder input is limited.
- Document rationale and communicate clearly to maintain trust.
Decision Criteria
- Use when time is critical and delay increases risk or cost.
- Use when legal, safety, or regulatory compliance demands decisive action.
- Use when information is sensitive and cannot be widely shared.
- Use when a single role has clear authority and needed expertise.
- Avoid when success depends on broad stakeholder commitment and buy-in.
- Avoid for complex trade-offs that impact multiple functions or long-term culture.
- Align with organizational culture, governance, and team maturity.
Method Steps
- Confirm decision authority, boundaries, and escalation paths.
- Frame the decision: problem statement, constraints, and success criteria.
- Collect essential data and targeted expert input quickly.
- Identify feasible options and evaluate against defined criteria and risks.
- Choose the option, record rationale, assumptions, and anticipated impacts.
- Communicate the decision, expected outcomes, and next steps to stakeholders.
- Assign owners, update plans and baselines if needed, and initiate actions.
- Monitor results and adjust if outcomes deviate from expectations.
Inputs Needed
- Project objectives, scope, constraints, and priorities.
- Risk, issue, and assumption logs with current analyses.
- Relevant data, expert advice, and performance information.
- Decision criteria and success measures, including cost-of-delay.
- Policies, contracts, regulations, and compliance requirements.
- Authority matrix, governance rules, and escalation thresholds.
- Stakeholder analysis (influence, interest, and expectations).
- Time constraints and resource availability.
Outputs Produced
- Documented decision with rationale, assumptions, and date.
- Assigned actions, owners, and due dates.
- Updates to schedule, budget, scope, risks, and issues.
- Stakeholder communications and meeting notes.
- Change requests or approvals, if required by governance.
- Lessons learned entry for future decision-making.
Trade-offs
- Speed and clarity versus inclusiveness and buy-in.
- Single-point accountability versus shared ownership.
- Lower coordination effort versus higher risk of blind spots.
- Confidentiality preservation versus reduced transparency.
- Faster execution versus potential morale and engagement impacts.
Example
A cross-functional project faces a high-risk compliance issue two days before a milestone. The project manager, empowered by the governance plan, quickly consults the compliance officer and lead engineer, then decides to switch to a pre-approved backup vendor and descopes a noncritical feature. The decision is documented, communicated to stakeholders, and the schedule and budget are updated to reflect the change.
Pitfalls
- Overusing autocratic decisions for routine choices that would benefit from collaboration.
- Skipping minimal consultation and missing key risks or dependencies.
- Acting without clear authority, leading to rework or escalation.
- Poor documentation that undermines transparency and traceability.
- Announcing decisions without explaining rationale, causing resistance.
- Ignoring organizational culture and eroding team trust.
- Failing to monitor outcomes and adjust when conditions change.
PMP Example Question
A critical defect is found 48 hours before a regulatory audit. The team is split on how to proceed, and debate is slowing progress. The project manager is authorized to make operational decisions. What should the project manager do?
- Make an autocratic decision after brief targeted consultation and document the rationale.
- Schedule additional workshops to build full consensus before deciding.
- Delay the decision until more data can be gathered next week.
- Escalate immediately to the sponsor to avoid personal accountability.
Correct Answer: A — Make an autocratic decision after brief targeted consultation and document the rationale.
Explanation: With urgent compliance risk and clear authority, an autocratic decision minimizes delay while maintaining accountability and traceability. Consensus-building would jeopardize timeliness.
HKSM