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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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P=2S+O© - #4

by Rick Baker
On Nov 12, 2009

For every Problem, there are at least 2 Solutions and there may also be some hidden Opportunities.

Link to P=2S+O worksheet/template.
[click to download]

In the last blog I mentioned P=2S+O is about thinking…thinking aimed at success.

I recently read ‘HOW SUCCESFUL PEOPLE THINK, Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life’, John C. Maxwell, 2009.

Here is a link to John C. Maxwell
http://www.johnmaxwell.com

Providing a formula like P=2S+O is intended to be a starting point.

Tools are required to help our people excel at converting Problems into Solutions and Opportunities.

We create tools for problem-solving.

And, we seek out the advice of experts...seminars, audio tapes, books, etc.

John Maxwell’s little book - HOW SUCCESFUL PEOPLE THINK, Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life - is as good a guide as I have come across. In clear and simple words, John introduces several types of thinking and he provides some good suggestions on Why we should and How we can approach thinking from different directions.

Here are samples of John Maxwell suggestions that fit very well with P=2S+O:

HARNESS CREATIVE THINKING - Characteristics of Creative Thinkers:

  • Creative Thinkers value ideas
  • Creative Thinkers explore options
  • Creative Thinkers embrace ambiguity
  • Creative Thinkers celebrate the offbeat
  • Creative Thinkers connect the unconnected
  • Creative Thinkers don’t fear failure
EXPLORE POSSIBILITY THINKING – why you should become a Possibility Thinker:
  1. Possibility thinking increases your possibilities
  2. Possibility thinking draws opportunities and people to you
  3. Possibility thinking increases others’ possibilities
  4. Possibility thinking allows you to dream big dreams
  5. Possibility thinking makes it possible to rise above average
  6. Possibility thinking gives you energy
  7. Possibility thinking keeps you from giving up
P=2S+Omeshes well with thinking as John Maxwell describes it...thinking aimed at Success.

More on this in the next blog...

Tags:

Solutions & Opportunities

P=2S+O© - #3

by Rick Baker
On Nov 10, 2009

For every Problem, there are at least 2 Solutions and there may also be some hidden Opportunities.

Link to P=2S+O worksheet/template.
[click to download]

In the first blog of this series I mentioned realists should call problems Problems. That is, we will do better if we don’t mince words or try to pretty up words in an effort to make sure other folks see us as optimists or positive-thinkers.

Clarity is important.

I ended the last blog saying, “We encourage our people to seek out Problems”.

Why?

There are many reasons why we say and do these things:

  • Communication improves when words are straightforward and simple
  • Problems are catalysts for business Change
  • Change brings progress
  • Solution-orientation is the best direction
  • Simple tools improve both communication and results
  • Every Problem does have many Solutions...so, thinking of 2 isn’t that tough a challenge
  • Opportunities do ‘ride on the wings of adversity’...not all the time, but sometimes

The better question is, Why Not!

  • Why Not force ourselves to spend quality time with Problems!
  • Why Not force ourselves to come up with multiple Solutions for our Problems!
  • Why Not force ourselves to think about Opportunities every time we think about Problems!
  • Why Not force ourselves to write all this down simply and clearly on one page!
  • Why Not share these pages with our co-workers!
  • Why Not show our bosses Solutions...regularly!
  • Why Not show our bosses Opportunities...from time to time!
P=2S+Oisn’t just a work guide and a communication tool,

P=2S+O is a piece of business philosophy.

P=2S+O is about thinking...thinking aimed at success.

More on this in the next blog...

Tags:

1-Page Tools | Solutions & Opportunities

P=2S+O© - #2

by Rick Baker
On Nov 5, 2009

For every Problem, there are at least 2 Solutions and there may also be some hidden Opportunities.

As promised in the last blog, here is a link to the P=2S+O worksheet/template. [click to download]

The worksheet is easy enough to use.

I kept it to one page.

At one page, people should be more inclined to use it. At one page, it can fit into a binder. Several copies can be printed in advance and completed later as Problems arise throughout the day.

I would like to thank the author Dan Kennedy - NO B.S. Ruthless Management of People & Profits, 2008, Figure 37.1, Problem-Solution Communication Template – for the idea of using a straightforward one-page format for communicating Problem-Solutions.

Here is a link to Dan Kennedy
http://www.nobsbooks.com

Bosses think things like, ‘Don’t bring me problems, bring me solutions’.

Dan Kennedy provided an easy way to do that.

When I read Dan’s book, his template jumped out as a great fit with our P=2S+O philosophy. I adapted Dan’s template.

So, now we have a P=2S+O worksheet/template.

We encourage our people to use the template.

We go beyond saying, “Don’t bring me Problems, bring me Solutions”.

We say, “Bring me Problems and bring me Solutions, and, from time to time, bring me Opportunities”.

We encourage our people to seek out Problems.

More on this in the next blog...

Tags:

Change: Creating Positive Change | Solutions & Opportunities

P=2S+O© - #1

by Rick Baker
On Nov 3, 2009

Some time ago, I made up the math formula P=2S+O.

It means, for every Problem there are always Solutions and there are often hidden Opportunities.

P=2S+O is a philosophical statement.

P=2S+O is a positive-thinking tool.

P=2S+O is a problem-solving tool.

In a series of a few blogs, I will explain things from the philosophy behind P=2S+O to the practical value it provides for problem-solving.

Perhaps the best starting point is “P”.

P = Problem

“You can’t start a formula with Problems. That’s pessimistic. You must start with Solutions or Opportunities!”

“You can not call problems Problems. You need to come up with a less-negative description.”

I’ve heard that.

I have disagreed.

Problems are Problems.

We do not need to make it prettier or any more complicated or any more palatable than that.

This ‘let’s just call problems Problems’ approach ties in with two other pieces of philosophy I embrace:

  • Seek Simple [when things are straightforward, keep them that way]
  • Seek Obvious [more on this later, or Google ‘Obvious Adams’ if you can not wait]
So, the formula starts with P... for Problem.

For every Problem there are at least 2 Solutions and there may be hidden Opportunities.

Bosses tend to buy into this.

Bosses have said things like, “Don’t bring me problems - show me solutions.”

And, that’s the main reason the formula P=2S+O was created. It was designed to help business people convert Problems into Solutions. Later, a ‘worksheet/template’ – a hands-on tool – was developed to help people.

At the next blog, I will provide the worksheet/template and more discussion of – Why use P=2S+O?

Also, I will explain why spending time thinking about Problems is not the work of a pessimist…it is the work of a realist.

Tags:

Solutions & Opportunities

A Lesson on Cold Calling

by Rick Baker
On Jul 6, 2009

Last week I met a fellow...an entrepreneur.

As we exchanged information about ourselves, he mentioned doing business with Disney.

I asked - how did you get that done?

He told me the story...

Several years ago, he and his partner were enthusiastically going about building a business. They met regularly on Sunday evenings to strategize for the upcoming week. One Sunday night they were discussing the difficulty they were having 'making contact' with Disney. They had made numerous attempts to connect with the 'key contact', who happened to be female.

Numerous attempts, phone messages, etc - zero success.

Then, one Sunday evening as they were strategizing, they decided they would send a bouquet of flowers to the lady with a note 'From the guys who have been bugging you for a meeting'.

They sent the bouquet of flowers the following day.

That generated a positive response.

They met the lady at Disney.

Then they did the deal with Disney.

[What a nice little story and lesson on cold calling.]

 

 

Tags:

Entrepreneur Thinking | Marketing

How should we view and analyse a Market Sector?

by Rick Baker
On Jun 5, 2009

A few decades ago, Michael Porter presented a way to analyse an industry sector…ie, a marketplace.  

He recommended Five Forces Industry Analysis”...see Michael Porter, ‘Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors’, [1980].

 

Porter’s Five Forces are:

  1. threat of new entrants
  2. bargaining power of suppliers
  3. bargaining power of buyers
  4. threat of substitute products or services
  5. degree of rivalry among existing competitors

It is wise to consider the Five Forces described by Procter…[perhaps after almost 30 years that’s now considered common sense]. 

It also makes sense to look at your choice of business sector from different perspectives.

This note is about a different way to think about your market niche…the sector where you are doing or will do business. 

Last year, Fernando Trías de Bes presented some different thinking in his book ‘The Little Black Book of Entrepreneurship – A Contrarian’s Guide To Succeeding Where Others Have Failed’ [2008].  

The book focuses on why businesses fail. Rather than talking about only KSFs [Key Success Factors] it recommends we consider KFFs [Key Failure Factors]. The author answers the question – “Why?”…”Because in order to apply the success factors, you need to clear the terrain of failure factors.” 

Is that contrarian?  [What about the W and the T of SWOT?] 

According to the author, one reason entrepreneurs fail is poor choices of market sectors. The author believes the root of the problem is many entrepreneurs do not consider the market sector to be a decision. Rather, they consider it to be a consequence of a random idea.  

The chapter on market sector is titled ‘ROUND NINE - No Novice Ever Won a Nobel Prize’ 

An example is given: a vacationer sees a new type of shoe while visiting a foreign land. The vacationer – the entrepreneur – knows that shoe is not available at home. The entrepreneur’s random idea is: we could sell that shoe at home. And the consequence of that random idea is: we will go into business in the shoe sector.   

Another example is given: a fellow became enthralled with a particular fast-food outlet. He spent six months studying the business of that fast-food outlet but failed to ask himself if he had a real interest in being in the fast-food sector. 

The author believes entrepreneurs often fail because they ‘back into’ the market sector because they are convinced they have a good idea for a product or have a good idea for a specific business.  

The way I’m looking at it, Fernando Trías de Bes tells us what we better think about before we follow the ‘process-analytics’ advice provided by folks like Michael Porter.  

Fernando Trías de Bes provides the following advice:

“The choice of the market sector for your business venture must be the result of a considered decision.

Choose your sector or product because it appeals to you.Go into a sector you know.

If you don’t know the sector, either take time to learn it or surround yourself with people who do know it.

You must bring something new into the market sector you choose to do business in.

Innovate by knowing the rules so you can break them.” 

 

***

Some Additional Thoughts: 

Fernando Trías de Bes at the cover of his book describes himself as a contrarian. It is sometimes difficult to tell the traditional from the contrarian.

One section of the Introduction of The Little Black Book of Entrepreneurship – A Contrarian’s Guide To Succeeding Where Others Have Failed’ caught my attention. At page 3 of the Introduction the author describes an on-line exercise he did using the words ‘key success factors’ and ‘key failure factors’. The author states,”Out of curiosity, I typed ”key success factors” into a search engine and found 636,000 pages; a search engine for “key failure factors” yielded only 119 pages.”

Last December, I performed an exercise using a few combinations of words like “Why Businesses Fail” and “Why Businesses Succeed”. My results, at least , my views about my results, are certainly contrary to those of the author. I feel I obtained the opposite result. For my search, I was not interested in the number of pages search engines found. I was interested in what the first 10 pages [using Google] contained for each search [see www.google.com]. My goal was to find 10 lists where writers provided their views about “Why Businesses Fail” and 10 lists where writers provided their views about “Why Businesses Succeed”. I was astonished to find a huge amount of free on-line articles and summaries covering the topic of  “Why Businesses Fail”…it was easy to find free-information and compile numerous lists of  “Why Businesses Fail”. Going from memory, I believe the first 12 websites contained 10 lists…so, my task of generating the 10 ‘failure lists’ was done quickly. Conversely, I had to read through almost 100 websites to find 10 ‘success lists’…and, I had to cheat a bit to get that done. I had to cull the ‘success’ verbiage to create lists while the ‘success’ writers volunteered simple lists…some numbered, some with bullet points.

After performing the above free-information-search exercise, I reached two conclusions:

  1. People who write about “Why Businesses Succeed” want to be paid for their opinions…so, they don’t write them out the way others write about “Why Businesses Fail”. Rather, when you search those business-success words you end up at sites that sell books…and 
  2. People who do express free advice about “Why Businesses Succeed” make far more subjective claims than do people who write about “Why Businesses Fail”. For example, they state things like business success is linked to long-distance running, meditiation, etc whereas the people who write about failure focus almost entirely on business reasons such as poor marketing, inadequate finance, etc. 

My December 2008 exercise coupled with the author’s differing view about on-line searches cause me to think two things:

  1. Many people think other people will pay for business-success education, so business-success information is not offered as freely as is business-failure information. There’s a good argument to be made this is all about packaging… and 
  2. I’m not sure Fernando Trías de Bes is a contrarian. His search-engine test...I struggle with that.

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.