Why randomness can be the fairest tiebreaker
Group decisions often stall not because the options are bad, but because everyone's trying to be polite and defer to someone else, or because a few people keep re-litigating the same two choices. Handing the actual decision to a random spin, after everyone's suggestion is already on the table, sidesteps both problems — no one has to 'give in,' because no one made the call.
This works best when every option genuinely is acceptable to the group; a decision wheel isn't a substitute for filtering out options nobody actually wants first. Once the shortlist is set, though, a spin is a fast, visibly neutral way to make the final call.