Product details

By continuing to use our site you consent to the use of cookies as described in our privacy policy unless you have disabled them.
You can change your cookie settings at any time but parts of our site will not function correctly without them.
Prize winner
Case
-
Reference no. 9B04C012
Published by: Ivey Publishing
Originally published in: 2004
Version: 2004-03-30
Length: 9 pages
Data source: Published sources

Abstract

In May 1996, two world renowned climbers, along with some of their clients and guides, perished on Mount Everest in the mountain''s deadliest tragedy to date. The accounts of survivors imply that biased decision making contributed to the tragedy. Did a decision lead to this tragedy or was it an unfortunate mountaineering accident? The case provides the opportunity to explore decision biases such as framing, escalation of commitment, anchoring, and over confidence and the issues of leadership style, group behaviour, team management and communication.
Location:
Other setting(s):
1996

About

Abstract

In May 1996, two world renowned climbers, along with some of their clients and guides, perished on Mount Everest in the mountain''s deadliest tragedy to date. The accounts of survivors imply that biased decision making contributed to the tragedy. Did a decision lead to this tragedy or was it an unfortunate mountaineering accident? The case provides the opportunity to explore decision biases such as framing, escalation of commitment, anchoring, and over confidence and the issues of leadership style, group behaviour, team management and communication.

Settings

Location:
Other setting(s):
1996

Related


Awards, prizes & competitions