Verified
The first rule in decision-making is that one does not make a decision unless there is disagreement.

Context

In his chapter on effective decision-making, Drucker argued that executives who seek consensus before deciding are likely to make poor decisions. Real decisions require the "clash of conflicting views" and the dialogue between different judgments. Without genuine disagreement surfacing alternatives and stress-testing assumptions, an executive cannot know whether they have considered all dimensions of a problem.

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