|
Turn Your Dreams of Perfection into Real Joy
Everyone daydreams about getting everything done that's
needed, but with little effort. Stop dreaming for a
moment, and let's create that reality instead.
With focused effort on creating 2,000 percent solutions
(ways of accomplishing 20 times more with the same time,
effort, and resources), you can turn those daydreams
into everyday results.
The steps for creating a 2,000 percent solution
are listed here:
1. Understand the importance of measuring performance.
2. Decide what to measure.
3. Identify the future best practice and measure
it.
4. Implement beyond the future best practice.
5. Identify the ideal best practice.
6. Pursue the ideal best practice.
7. Select the right people and provide the right
motivation.
8. Repeat the first seven steps.
This article looks at practicing to become more effective
in step six.
Think about several ways that you would like to get
perfect results with minimal effort. Then select one
or more of those opportunities to implement. In making
this choice, be sure to evaluate your organizations
track record or your personal history for successfully
making similar changes and other ways you can reduce
risk.
Set Your Sights on the Stars
To select which opportunity or opportunities to pursue,
first set an objective for each of your 2,000 percent
solutions. Make the objective neither too modest nor
too aggressive. Typically, a 20 times improvement is
a mere threshold goal. You can probably reach a 40 times
improvement with little more effort.
Make sure, too, that you will frequently realize
some benefits along the way to your ultimate goal.
With those 2,000 percent solution objectives in mind,
look for the best balance of benefits, costs, resources,
and time to completion to select the 2,000 percent solution
choice or choices you should pursue for approaching
an ideal best practice.
Eenie, Meenie, Mynie, Moe
In any quest for the ideal best practice, think of
at least four possible ways to reach the goal. When
attempting such important breakthroughs, your chances
of success are greatly increased by simultaneously pursuing
several planning paths. Otherwise, a stumble on one
path blocks the whole project.
Studies have also shown that if you design four ways
to do something, the final cost will usually be about
a third less than if you design only one way. If instead
you find eight ways of doing something, costs will come
down even more, but only by a maximum of an additional
15 percent. There is a point of diminishing returns
on designing alternate plans, but you probably will
run out of good ideas before you reach that limit.
I recommend that you begin with and focus on the simplest
approaches. This direction will limit false starts and
save much time and money.
Benefit Along the Way
Choose to gain benefits every six months or so. These
progress steps will keep project participants from becoming
bored and those who are funding the project encouraged.
What's a reasonable target? In most cases, you should
be able to make at least a 10-fold improvement in six
months or less. The exceptions come in areas that require
extensive software development.
With this approach to targeting regular benefits,
you'll keep morale high, everyone will be excited about
implementing more improvements, and you'll avoid biting
off more than you can chew.
Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved
Author: Donald Mitchell
Donald Mitchell is chairman of Mitchell and Company,
a strategy and financial consulting firm in Weston,
MA. He is coauthor of six books including The 2,000
Percent Squared Solution, The 2,000 Percent Solution,
and The 2,000 Percent Solution Workbook. You can find
free tips for accomplishing 20 times more by registering
at:
=========> http://www.2000percentsolution.com
.
Keywords : 2000 percent solution, solution, progress,
improvement, productivity, measurement, learning, stalls,
stall, stallbusting, cost reduction, ideal solutions,
perfection
Content Provided By : SubmitYOURArticle.com
|