In AP Business, the PACED model is a deliberative decision-making process where you define the Problem, list Alternatives, set Criteria, Evaluate each option against those criteria, and Decide on the best course of action.
PACED is an acronym that walks you through a structured business decision: Problem, Alternatives, Criteria, Evaluate, Decide. Instead of going with your gut, you slow down and work through each step. First you name exactly what decision you're making. Then you brainstorm a few real options. Next you decide what factors actually matter (cost, profit, reputation). You score each option against those factors. Finally you pick the winner.
The CED ties this directly to EK 4.3.B.1, which describes a deliberative process as "defining the problem to address or decision to be made, developing alternatives (or options), establishing decision-making criteria, and evaluating alternative courses of action to decide on the best approach, which may be referred to as the PACED model." The criteria step pulls in both quantifiable costs and benefits (production costs, total sales, profits) and intangible ones like reputation, per EK 4.3.B.2. So PACED isn't just a list, it's how you turn messy real-world choices into something you can actually compare side by side.
PACED lives in Unit 4: Management and Strategy, specifically Topic 4.3 Strategy and Decision Making. It supports learning objective AP Business 4.3.B, "Apply a deliberative process to make a business decision." That word apply is the giveaway. You won't just define PACED on the exam, you'll run a scenario through it. It also connects to 4.3.A, because the decision you reach should serve a larger business strategy like cutting costs, boosting revenue, or building competitive advantage. PACED is the engine that turns a strategy on paper into an actual choice.
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Visual cheatsheet
view galleryStrategic Decision Making (Unit 4)
PACED is the tool; strategic decision making is the goal. A strategic decision sets the business's direction, and PACED gives you the orderly steps to land on that decision instead of guessing.
Criteria (Unit 4)
The 'C' in PACED is literally criteria. These are the yardsticks you measure every option against, and they include both hard numbers (profit, production cost) and soft factors (brand reputation).
Tradeoff (Unit 4)
Every PACED decision involves a tradeoff. When you pick the winning alternative, you're giving up the benefits of the ones you rejected, so the 'Evaluate' step is really about weighing what you gain against what you lose.
Evidence (Unit 4)
The 'Evaluate' step only works if you back it with evidence. Per EK 4.3.A.2, businesses gather and track data to compare options, so PACED is data-driven, not opinion-driven.
Expect to see PACED in scenario form, not as a vocabulary fill-in-the-blank. A typical multiple-choice stem describes a manager working through the steps, like a retail manager deciding whether to expand into online sales: she defines the problem, lists three expansion strategies, identifies financial and reputational criteria, compares each strategy against those criteria, and selects one. You may be asked to name which PACED step she's on, or to identify the model itself. On free response, you'd apply PACED to a given business situation: lay out the problem, generate alternatives, state your criteria, and justify your final pick with evidence. Always tie your decision back to a business goal so it reads as strategic, not random.
Criteria are just one piece of PACED, the 'C' step. PACED is the whole five-step process, while criteria are the specific standards (cost, profit, reputation) you use during the Evaluate step. Saying 'PACED' when you mean 'criteria' is like calling a single ingredient the whole recipe.
PACED stands for Problem, Alternatives, Criteria, Evaluate, Decide, and it's the deliberative decision-making process described in EK 4.3.B.1.
It supports learning objective 4.3.B, so the exam wants you to apply it to a scenario, not just define it.
The Criteria step uses both quantifiable factors (production costs, sales, profits) and intangible ones like reputation, per EK 4.3.B.2.
PACED turns a business strategy into an actual choice, linking Topic 4.3.B back to the strategy goals in 4.3.A.
Every PACED decision involves a tradeoff, because choosing one alternative means giving up the others.
It's a five-step decision-making process: define the Problem, list Alternatives, set Criteria, Evaluate each option against those criteria, and Decide. The CED introduces it in EK 4.3.B.1 as a deliberative process for making major business decisions.
Yes, but knowing the acronym isn't enough. Learning objective 4.3.B asks you to apply the process, so be ready to run a real scenario through all five steps and justify your final decision with evidence.
Criteria are only the 'C' step inside PACED, the standards like cost, profit, or reputation that you use to judge your options. PACED is the entire five-step framework, so criteria are one part of it, not the whole thing.
No. A business strategy is the overall plan for hitting a goal like increasing profits or building competitive advantage (EK 4.3.A.1). PACED is the decision-making tool you use to make choices that serve that strategy.
You score each alternative against your chosen criteria, weighing both quantifiable costs and benefits (production costs, sales, profits) and intangible ones like reputation. It's where you compare options side by side using evidence before you Decide.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.