CASE ANALYSIS
https://casenent.ca. Case:Nova Scotia Fisherman
Assignment shall be limited to no more than 2 single spaced pages plus diagrams and appendices. Written cases shall have the following sections: 1.Title, Introduction: Issue and Cause Summarized, 2.SWOT Analysis, 3. Decision Criteria(which is important), 4. Alternatives, .Solution, 5.Justification for Choice of Solution and Not Others, 6,Implications for the Organization, and References. Please use APA style when citing and referencing information.
* About Decision Criteria
An important aspect of the case analysis process is providing a justification for the choice of alternative solutions as well as connecting
Defining ‘Decision Criteria'
Decision criteria for multimedia teaching cases can be defined in numerous ways. These include:
· Guidelines by which to judge the alternatives
· How to decide which is the best solution among the alternatives
· How uncertainty and doubt are reduced so that a reasonable choice can be made among alternatives
· A standard, rule, or test on which a judgment or decision can be based.
· The basis for comparison among alternatives
· The ideal in terms of which something can be judged
· Specific measures used to determine the best choice among alternatives
· A gauge, norm or yardstick
Generating Selection Criteria:
Generating a list of expected benefits that would be achieved by resolving the issue at hand is one way to create selection criteria. The expected benefits are then grouped based on underlying themes.
Common Qualitative and Quantitative Examples of Decision Criteria:
Qualitative: competitive advantage, customer satisfaction, employee morale, corporate image, ease of implementation, synergy, ethics, visibility, safety, visual appeal, obsolescence, cultural sensitivity, motivation, goodwill, environmental impact, flexibility, within present resources and capabilities, consistent with corporate strategy , successful, efficient, new, coherent.
Quantitative: profit, cost, return on investment, market share, capacity, delivery time, risk, cash flow, inventory turnover, productivity, staff turnover, quality, growth rate quantity
Key decision criteria should be:
· Important to the organization making the decision
· Brief, preferably in point form
· Measurable, at least to the point of comparison, such as alternative A will reduce expenses more that alternative B