Choosing Among Alternative New Product Development Projects: The Role of Heuristics

Douglas West, Oguz Acar, Albert Caruana

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

77 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The initial screening decision that marketing managers make is critical. It requires the selection of which innovation project to invest in, which is fundamental to marketing success. However, our knowledge of how managers make these decisions and how this impacts performance is limited. By drawing upon cognitive psychology and the managerial decision-making literature, we address two critical questions. The first question focuses on identifying specific decision-making types (e.g., specific heuristics, intuition) used when making an innovation-screening decision. Based on this analysis and prior research, we develop specific decision-maker profiles about how an individual manager decides. The second research question is about connecting these profiles with performance. Specifically, it addresses what the consequences of different decision-maker profiles are on the perceived accuracy and speed of decision-making? Data were collected from 122 senior managers in these industries. We find that when heuristics are used alone, or concurrently with intuition, managers make decisions that are as accurate as when they rely on analytical decision-making. However, the process is significantly faster. The findings provide an important step towards a more comprehensive understanding of decision-making at the front-end of innovation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPsychology & Marketing
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Innovation, Product screening, Decision-making, Heuristics, Intuition

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Choosing Among Alternative New Product Development Projects: The Role of Heuristics'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this