Why decisions fail
Most decisions fail due to lack of clarity or incomplete information. They fail not because people are unable to decide, but because they have not structured the problem well enough to decide.
AI does not solve this automatically. But when used deliberately, it helps teams slow down and structure thinking before they act.
“Good decisions come from structured thinking, not faster answers.”
– Atin Sood
Using AI effectively
The key is to use AI as a structuring tool, not an answer machine.
- Break decisions into components before asking for recommendations
- Compare options side by side using consistent criteria
- Evaluate tradeoffs explicitly, time, risk, cost, alignment
AI helps structure thinking. The judgement call remains yours.
A simple framework
Use this sequence for any significant decision.
- Define the decision, what exactly needs to be decided and by when
- List options, include options you think are weaker; surface the full range
- Evaluate risks, for each option, ask what could go wrong and what the cost is
- Recommend direction, ask AI to summarise which option best fits your stated criteria
This creates clarity before action. It also creates a record of how the decision was made.
Where teams get this wrong
Most teams go to AI after the decision has already been made, looking for validation. That is confirmation bias with extra steps.
The value is in using AI before you are committed, when options are still open and thinking is still fluid.
Closing
AI does not make decisions. It helps you make better ones. That distinction matters.
In the next post, I will explore how AI expands creative thinking without replacing the human instinct that gives creativity meaning.