# Decision-Making Examples: The 5 Types You'll Actually Face at Work

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/decision-making/decision-making-examples/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/decision-making/decision-making-examples.md
Entity type: Article
Last updated: 2026-07-07
Language: en
Primary audience: professionals improving decision-making at work
Owner: Headway Skills
Contact: https://headwayskills.com/contact/

## Short answer

Real decision-making examples at work, sorted into five clear types — from routine calls to big judgment ones — and what makes a decision genuinely good.

## Key facts

- Title: Decision-Making Examples: The 5 Types You'll Actually Face at Work
- Category: Decision Making
- Primary skill: Decision-Making
- Related skills: Building Confidence, Teamwork
- Primary keyword: decision making examples
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/decision-making/decision-making-examples/

## What this page covers

- Real decision-making examples at work, sorted into five clear types — from routine calls to big judgment ones — and what makes a decision genuinely good.
- Practical guidance for decision making examples
- How this topic connects to Decision-Making

## Detailed explanation

Decision-making examples at work range from routine, rule-based calls — approving a standard expense or scheduling a shift — to harder judgment calls with no rulebook, like choosing between two suppliers or resolving a team conflict. Most workplace decisions fall into a handful of recognizable types, and knowing which type you're facing tells you how much care it deserves.

If you searched for this, you probably want more than a definition — you want to see what a real decision looks like in practice, maybe to sharpen the skill or to answer that interview question about a time you decided well. The examples below are useful less as a list to memorize and more as a set of patterns: once you can name the type of decision in front of you, the right way to handle it gets a lot clearer.

## What counts as a decision-making example at work

Not every choice at work is a "decision" in the meaningful sense. Some are handled by a rule you simply apply; others force you to weigh options with [incomplete information](/knowledge/decision-making/analysis-paralysis/). Career guides and management texts tend to sort them along a few dimensions: how routine they are, how far ahead they reach, who holds the final call, and how easily they can be undone. Below are five types you'll recognize, each with an example and the thing that sets it apart.

### Routine (programmed) decisions

These are the repetitive, everyday calls governed by an existing rule, policy, or precedent — approving a standard expense, signing off on a familiar order, scheduling shifts, answering a common customer request the way you always do. What defines them is that the procedure already exists, so the real work is applying it consistently rather than inventing an answer. Management writing calls these *programmed* decisions, and their value is speed and consistency: once the rule is set, you don't rethink it from scratch every time. The quiet skill here is spotting the moment a "routine" case is actually an exception that shouldn't be run on autopilot.

### Judgment (non-programmed) decisions

At the other end sit the novel, one-off, or messy situations no rulebook covers: choosing between two vendors, deciding how to handle an unhappy client, settling a disagreement between teammates, or reworking a plan when the budget changes mid-project. These *non-programmed* decisions involve conflicting priorities and incomplete information, so they ask you to gather facts, [weigh alternatives](/knowledge/decision-making/decision-making-process/), and commit under uncertainty. This is where decision-making feels hard — and where a good example stands out. Management texts describe real decisions as *bounded*: you rarely have perfect information, so the aim is a sound, defensible choice rather than a flawless one. Accepting "good enough" is often the mature call, not a cop-out.

### Operational vs. strategic decisions

Decisions also sort by scope and time horizon. Operational (or tactical) ones affect the day or the task — how to sequence your week, which of two tickets to tackle first, whether to batch a set of replies. Strategic decisions shape a team's or an organization's longer-term direction: entering a new market, restructuring a department, betting on a product line. The distinguishing feature is reach. Early in your career, almost all of your decisions are operational, and that's exactly as it should be — strategic calls usually sit higher up or need to be escalated. Knowing the difference keeps you from agonizing over a small choice as if the company depended on it, or quietly making a big one you should have raised.

### Individual vs. group decisions

Some decisions are yours to make alone; others belong to a group. An individual decision sits inside your own authority — you choosing how to structure a report, a manager assigning who works on what. A group or [collaborative decision](/knowledge/decision-making/collaborative-decision-making/) is reached together, through discussion, gathered input, or consensus: a team weighing three campaign options and picking one, or a hiring panel agreeing on a candidate. The distinguishing feature is where the authority sits, and whether the outcome depends on buy-in from the people who have to carry it out. A frequent early-career mistake is deciding alone when the call needed the team's input, or waiting for a group to weigh in on something you were free to settle yourself. Telling the two apart quickly is its own skill — and it starts with an honest read of [how you tend to decide](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) when you're under pressure.

### Reversible vs. irreversible decisions

Finally, decisions differ in how easily they can be undone. A reversible decision is a trial you can adjust next week — testing a new meeting format, trying a different way to organize your files. An irreversible one is hard or costly to walk back: hiring someone, signing a contract, announcing a change publicly. The distinguishing feature is the cost of being wrong. Reversible calls reward speed: make them quickly and correct course if needed. Irreversible ones reward slowing down, getting a second opinion, and checking your reasoning before you commit. Sorting a decision this way first, before anything else, tells you how much time it genuinely deserves.

## What makes a decision example a good one

Look across all five types and you'll notice the quality of a decision has little to do with luck and almost everything to do with process. A strong example usually shows a few things: the person knew the limits of their authority and pulled in the right people, they slowed down when the stakes or their own emotions were running high, and they steered clear of the traps that quietly wreck decisions — confirmation bias (seeking only the evidence that agrees with you), the [sunk-cost trap](/knowledge/decision-making/sunk-cost-fallacy/) (sticking with a failing plan because you've already invested in it), overconfidence, and anchoring on the first number you happened to hear.

This is also why "describe a time you made an effective decision" is such a common interview question. Interviewers aren't fishing for a lucky outcome; they want to see the reasoning — how you gathered information, weighed the options, and committed. A good decision-making example is one you can explain, not just one that happened to work out.

## The skills that make these decisions easier

Read back over those examples and a pattern surfaces: handling them well isn't really about the decisions themselves. It comes down to a few underlying habits that keep showing up — the ability to weigh options soundly, the nerve to actually commit, and the judgment to bring other people in at the right moment.

**Decision-Making** is the most direct of these. It's less about raw intelligence and more about knowing your authority, following a sound process, getting a second opinion — especially from people who might disagree with you — and sidestepping the cognitive traps above. It's the difference between a choice you stumbled into and one you can stand behind.

**Building Confidence** is what lets you decide at all. A surprising number of "bad decisions" are really decisions never made — choices postponed out of a fear of getting it wrong. Confidence here isn't bravado; it's built by deciding, watching what happens, and treating a poor call as information for the next one rather than a verdict on you.

**Teamwork** carries the group decisions. Many of the best workplace examples are reached with other people, which takes something specific: putting the shared goal ahead of being right, disagreeing openly without making it personal, and then backing a decision the group landed on even when you argued for something else. A decision no one will act on isn't really a decision.

None of these three is a fixed trait — they're habits, and just a few of the twelve that the **free** Work Skills Test looks at. If you're not sure which one is doing the most for you and which is quietly costing you, it can show you [which skill to build first](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/).

You might already notice some of this in how you work — sorting the reversible calls from the ones that deserve a second look, or pulling in a colleague when a decision isn't yours alone to make. That instinct is the raw material; the rest is learnable, and it grows as you give it room. None of it asks you to become a different person — just to get more deliberate about moves you're already half-making.

It's worth being honest that these habits matter more, not less, as you take on responsibility. The decisions get bigger, the traps get more expensive, and the calls you make in front of a team start to shape how people see you. The fact that you're reading about how good decisions actually work — rather than hoping to wing it — already puts you ahead of most people at your stage. The only open question is which of these skills will move the needle most for you right now.

## See where your decision-making actually stands

So the last step is simple: instead of guessing which of these skills is your strong suit and which one is quietly holding you back, you can find out. The **free** Work Skills Test is a short self-assessment that shows you where you stand across all twelve work skills — decision-making, confidence, and teamwork among them — and points you to the ones that will make the biggest difference for you right now.

**[Take the skills test](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/)**

*Free, and it takes about 7 minutes.*

## Who this is for

- Professionals building practical workplace skills
- Readers looking for specific, usable work advice
- Managers, educators, and coaches supporting career readiness

## Common questions

### What is this guide about?

Real decision-making examples at work, sorted into five clear types — from routine calls to big judgment ones — and what makes a decision genuinely good.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Decision-Making. It also relates to Building Confidence, Teamwork.

### What is the recommended next step?

Use the free Work Skills Test to reflect on which work skill to improve next.

## Related pages

- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/decision-making.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/confidence.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/teamwork.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

## Citation guidance

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## Change log

- 2026-07-07: Content collection version published.
