# 4: Decision-Making in Practice ## **What happens in session** Studios explore cooperative decision-making frameworks (consensus, consent, majority, delegation, random chance). They practice identifying who gets to raise issues, work through decision-making steps, and discuss handling dissent. The session also covers meetings (roles, facilitation, rotating responsibilities) and the "genius trap." Studios do a facilitation rotation practice in groups of three. The Informal Hierarchy Check-In is introduced as an ongoing tool. :::tip **Homework assigned:** practice one decision-making framework on a real decision, map current role distribution, complete the Informal Hierarchy Check-In as a studio, and notice where decisions happen this week. ::: ### :eyes: **Your role during session** - Observe the facilitation rotation activity — note how your studio members handle facilitating, participating, and observing - Listen for how they talk about where decisions currently happen (meetings? DMs? default to one person?) - Note whether anyone identifies informal hierarchy patterns during the journaling activity ### 👆 **Your role after session** - Make sure your studio understands the Informal Hierarchy Check-In questions and plans to work through them together - Confirm they've chosen which decision-making framework to practice this week - Check that they understand the difference between consensus and consent — this trips people up ## **This week's Studio Support Meeting: Decision-Making Practice + Informal Hierarchy Check-In** ### **📚 Materials** - Informal Hierarchy Check-In questions (from session) - Decision-making frameworks reference (consensus, consent, majority, delegation) - The studio's notes from the facilitation rotation activity ### **👆 Before the session** - Know which decision-making framework the studio chose to practice - Have a small, real decision ready in case the studio can't think of one (e.g., "What should your next team social activity be?" or "How should you structure your next sprint?") - Review the 5 Informal Hierarchy Check-In questions so you can facilitate them smoothly ### **🌊 Session flow** #### **Check-in (5 min)** "What did you notice in the facilitation rotation? What was harder than expected — facilitating, participating, or observing?" #### **Practice a decision-making framework (20-25 min)** Help the studio work through a real decision using their chosen framework. **Set up (3 min):** - Name the decision clearly. Write it down where everyone can see it. - Name the framework you're using — "We're going to try consent on this." - Clarify: who is affected by this decision? Does everyone here need to be part of it? **Work through the decision-making steps (15-20 min):** 1. Understand the context — what's happening? What do people feel about it? 2. Identify the underlying need — what are we actually trying to address? 3. Generate options — encourage weird ideas. Notice who contributes. 4. Check alignment with values — how do these options fit with who you want to be? 5. Evaluate consequences — who benefits, who's affected, trade-offs? 6. Decide using the framework — name the method before you begin. 7. Before finalizing: "Does anyone have concerns they haven't voiced? Is anyone agreeing just to move on?" 8. Clarify implementation — who does what? When do you check back? **Debrief (5 min):** - "How did that feel compared to how you usually make decisions?" - "What was different about naming the framework first?" - "Did anyone notice moments where old patterns kicked in?" #### **Informal Hierarchy Check-In (15-20 min)** Work through the five questions together. Go one at a time. 1. **Who spoke most in our last meeting?** 2. **Whose idea did we go with by default?** 3. **Who knows how to do [X] that no one else knows?** 4. **What happened last time someone disagreed?** 5. **Whose schedule shapes our meeting times?** Prompts to keep it exploratory, not accusatory: - "No guilt here — we're just noticing." - "These patterns aren't problems yet. But under pressure, they become cracks." - "What would you want to change? What's actually fine?" Capture observations — they'll bring these to Session 5. #### **Close (5 min)** - "What's one pattern you noticed that you want to keep an eye on?" - Remind them to notice where decisions happen this week (in meetings? DMs? Slack? who's present?) ### 👉 **Also this week** #### **Map your current role distribution** This can be done async or as part of the PS meeting if there's time. The question is simple: for each role/responsibility in the studio, where did it come from — explicit decision or implicit default? Prompts: - "Who handles finances? Was that decided or did it just happen?" - "Who schedules meetings? Who takes notes? Who answers external emails?" - "Are there roles no one officially has but someone 'just does'?" This feeds directly into Session 5's governance work. ### :star: **Tips** If the decision-making practice feels artificial: - "The point isn't the outcome — it's noticing the process. How you decide matters as much as what you decide." If one person dominates the decision: - "I noticed [name] spoke first and longest. Can we try a round where everyone shares before discussion?" If no one disagrees: - "That was quick! Is everyone actually aligned, or is someone going along to keep things moving?" (This is a direct reference to the dissent section from the session.) If the hierarchy check-in gets tense: - "This isn't about blame. The same name coming up a lot is information, not an indictment." If someone gets defensive: - "It's okay — noticing patterns is the hardest part. You don't need to fix anything today." ### **🏁 After the session** - Note which patterns came up in the Informal Hierarchy Check-In — especially anything the studio seemed to avoid discussing - Note how the decision-making practice went — did they actually use the framework or fall back into old patterns? - Bring observations to your PS check-in ## :triangular_flag_on_post: **Red flags to watch for** - A studio that "decides" everything by default to one person and calls it delegation - Someone consistently going along without engaging — "I'm fine with whatever" - Resistance to the hierarchy check-in — "we don't have hierarchy, we're all equal" (everyone has patterns) - Decisions happening outside the room (in DMs between two people) and being presented as done - The same person always facilitating, taking notes, or scheduling