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Make One Plus One Equal 400 Times More Profits
Before creating the 2,000 percent solution process
(devising ways to accomplish 20 times more with the
same time, money, resources, and effort), I noticed
that most of the world's best solutions to important
problems were put into use by a few people more than
400 years before broad adoption. Consider the mortar
in Roman roads. Visit Italy and you see roads that are
still in use after more than 1,500 years. Watch the
new concrete highways near your home, and they will
soon be crumbling from ice damage, leaving endless potholes.
True, the Romans didn't have large semis carrying heavy
loads on their roads. But the Romans were clearly ahead
of their time when it came to making roads built to
last.
The Romans knew that ice is the enemy of roads. Water
needs cracks to get into before it freezes and causes
damage. The Romans drew from the pumice that had spewed
out of Mount Etna to create finely ground, glass-based
powder. When mixed into their mortar, the material became
ice resistant.
By contrast, the local contractor building your concrete
highway wins the bid based on the lowest price. In that
environment, contractors are unlikely to insist that
better roads be built. The contractor usually puts coarse
material (like sand and finer bits of gravel) into the
concrete. Water finds it easy to penetrate, freeze,
and expand, thus destroying the concrete containing
these coarse materials. Some contractor then gets to
rebuild the road and make a second profit, and a third,
and so on. You and I pay the bills through higher gasoline
taxes. We also have to align our cars more frequently.
Recently, some governments have grown wiser. They specify
that the concrete has to use fine-grained material like
fly ash from coal-fired plants. Fly ash is very cheap,
even less costly than sand, so look for your roads to
last longer in the future. How long will these roads
last? We won't know for decades, but it's a nice prospect
to consider.
If a solution that obvious has been overlooked for
so long, we wondered "What else are we missing?"
It turns out that there's a huge backlog of great ideas
we can use to make exponential progress in overcoming
important problems. Let's consider the ways to make
such exponential progress in more detail.
Here's a reminder of what a 2,000 percent solution
is: Any method of producing a 20 times increase in the
usual results with the same amount of time and effort,
or producing the same results with zero-to-four percent
of the current time and resources . . . or some equally
effective combination of both approaches. The road example
may have the potential to fit that description; you
may be able to build some roads that last 21 times as
long for less money and effort.
Here's what else we learned about making large improvements.
Most people apply the 2,000 percent solution process
to one improvement opportunity at a time. The three
most popular choices for creating such solutions have
been:
1. Speeding up a sluggish process that's filled
with unnecessary delays
2. Accelerating a slow rate of making cost reductions
3. Eliminating errors in an ineffective process
By themselves, such improvements provide remarkable
benefits for stakeholders (those who are affected by
the organization's or the individual's efforts) and
delight those who develop the solutions. We congratulate
all who have accomplished such fine results.
Relatively few, however, take the poetic road "less
traveled by" to seek first expanding usage by 21
times, but that road makes "all the difference."
Why is that more desirable road usually avoided? I think
it has something to do with low self-esteem. New 2,000
percent solution creators often tell me during the early
stages of their investigations that they lack confidence
they will succeed. Unless they cannot find a real mess
in an existing activity that seems easy to fix, these
new solution creators are unlikely to want to tackle
expanding usage. Paradoxically, such expansions usually
also deliver astonishingly better ways to speed up sluggish
processes, accelerate cost reductions, develop better
offerings, and eliminate errors. This opportunity to
greatly expand usage seems to be one of those rare cases
where you can have your cake and eat it too!
When both usage and delivery effectiveness improve,
stakeholders can gain 20 times more benefits than from
either improvement alone. When that combination happens,
these two complementary 2,000 percent solutions acquire
the power of 20 or more individual 2,000 percent solutions.
That's what I mean by a 2,000 percent squared solution.
You can also think of this concept as developing a 40,000
percent solution, or a 400 times increase in benefits.
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
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