Submitted by Martin Sumner-Smith on Fri, 09/09/2011 – 11:57
If something of value is in short supply you will tend to conserve it. That turns out to be true of your capacity to deal with alternatives, make decisions and even to sustain your efforts at tasks.These finding have profound implications for enterprise content management (ECM).Psychologists have recently described the phenomenon of Decision Fatigue. A recent New York Times article by John Tierney titled, “Do You Suffer From Decision Fatigue?“ gave an excellent overview which I will quote extensively here.The more you make decisions, the less capacity you have to make additional ones in a given period. And these decisions do not have to be hard to deplete your capacity — in fact they can be quite trivial. Once you have depleted that capacity, you generally respond in one of two ways: you make impulsive decisions or pick the default; or you delay making any decision.The biology behind this process is beginning to be understood. It turns out that making decisions takes energy; in fact regions of your brain actually use glucose to fuel decision making. If the glucose becomes depleted it needs to be restored — typically by taking a break and having a snack. Until that happens, these brain regions, especially those involved in impulse control, have lowered activity.However, overall use of glucose by the brain does not change, because other regions of the brain, including those involved in seeking reward, become more active.An increased tendency to make impulsive decisions is also associated with a reduction in willpower. People become more easily distracted and less likely to complete tasks, including completing a series of decisions required of them. Alternatively, they make take the easy way out by picking a default.What does this have to do with enterprise content management? I think it is very important. Let’s consider two examples:
- Consumer behaviour on a business website — a web content management (WCM) example
- Staff execution of work — a business process management (BPM) example