Beyond Black and White - A qualitative study exploring the interplay between intuition and rationality in decision making
Abstract
The interplay between intuition and rationality plays a big role in decision-making but is
often underexplored in organisational contexts. Traditional literature views treat these modes
of thought as mutually exclusive and contradictory elements, yet recent studies suggest they
are complementary, especially in complex and unpredictable settings. This study aims to
contribute to the gap in understanding how intuition and rationality interact in
decision-making processes within an organisation. We draw on a qualitative study on
Company X – an energy company located in Sweden – where data were collected through
semi-structured interviews with employees across various hierarchical levels, supplemented
by document analysis. Our findings suggest that decision-making processes within
organisations exist along a dynamic spectrum where intuition and rationality coexist and
influence each other. Decisions typically blend rational and intuitive approaches, influenced
by the decision-maker's experience, data availability, time constraints, differing contexts, and
the nature of the decision. With this study we argue that the interplay of intuition and
rationality within a decision-making process takes place on a dynamic spectrum, which
organisations should recognize with an aim to enhance decision-making by leveraging the
strengths of both rational analysis and intuitive insight.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Management
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2024-07-02Author
Fonsmark, Linus
Scolieri, Isabella
Keywords
Decision-making
Intuition
Rationality
Spectrum
Organisational Decision-making
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project 2024:13
Language
eng