Async Governance GlossaryDefinition

What Is Decision making?

Last updated: April 2026

Definition

Decision making is the process of choosing among options under uncertainty. In organizational contexts, it is rarely the act of a lone decider — it is the result of information flow, authority structure, deliberation, and the speed at which choices can be made and communicated.

Organizational decision making is distinct from individual judgment. An individual can have good judgment and still be unable to decide because the authority is not theirs. An organization can have good information and still be slow because the decision path is unclear.

Distributed teams face an additional decision-making constraint: synchronous decision-making does not scale across timezones. Either decisions move async, or they freeze whenever the decider is offline.

Why Decision making Matters for Distributed Teams

Most "decision-making" complaints in organizations are actually structural: unclear authority, missing information, or decision paths that route through offline people.

Fixing decision making structurally — declared authority, declared scope, async paths — produces dramatic improvements that no amount of individual coaching could match.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is decision making?

Decision making is the process of choosing among options under uncertainty. In organizational contexts, it depends on authority, information flow, and the speed at which choices can be communicated. It is rarely the act of a single decider in isolation.

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See decision making in action.

StandIn is built around these concepts. Engineers publish declared state before going offline. The next shift starts with full context.