Monthly Archives: December 2010

Priorities

The Mrs. and I were chatting this morning about priorities. Not ours, actually, but about how many folks have difficulty in distinguishing “I want” from “I need”. This time of year, especially if you have young ones around, you can get a great sense of that distinction, particularly if you go back and look at last year’s “I’ll die if I don’t get it” item. Probably in a closet somewhere gathering dust. Is business any different?

Not really, unfortunately. We all know every project can’t be a top priority – something has to top the list. Unless and until we have unlimited, capable resources (don’t hold your breath) something is going to have to wait. After all, the expression is ASAP – as soon as possible – with emphasis on “possible.” I think some folks forget that it’s not a synonym for “right now”.

One of the most important things we can do as managers is to set priorities and realistic deadlines for our team. How many times does the priority list seem as if it consists of one item – everything- and because of that nothing seems to get done?

I used to tell my team that while I may have worked for a few networks none of them were the Psychic Friends network – I don’t know what you don’t communicate. By the same logic, we can’t expect our folks to know what’s really critical as opposed to generally urgent as distinguished from it can wait unless we tell them. Their perspectives may not include enough information to allow them to choose on their own. Your perspective is probably incomplete, and your priority-setting may be faulty- if you don’t understand what’s going on with the team and resources.

My priority right now (I’m on a train) was to get you a post (so please forgive any typos and no links). What are yours?

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Filed under Consulting, Reality checks

Eating Your Mistakes

List of U.S. state foods

Today’s Foodie Friday question is pretty simple: what do chocolate chip cookies and molten chocolate cake have in common (other than the chocolate)? Given today’s headline, this really shouldn’t be too difficult. Right! They were both mistakes. In the case of the cookies, the baker at the Toll House Inn was trying to make chocolate cookies and ran out of block baker’s chocolate to melt. She tried adding little pieces of sweetened chocolate she had hoping they would melt. In the latter case, Jean-Georges Vongerichten (who may or may not have actually invented it but did popularize it) was trying to bake a traditional Chocolate Torte and undercooked it. The results were, and are, fabulous. My point? Continue reading

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Filed under Helpful Hints, Thinking Aloud

Beyond The Canonical Perspective

Made it myself

Let’s have some fun.  Grab a pen and some paper and draw a cup or a car or a house.  Done?  Great.  There’s this term – canonical perspective.  It comes out of some research first presented in 1981 by a guy named Palmer.  The short version of what he did was to ask folks to draw him something and he found that most people drew the object from the same perspective – slightly above, looking down, and a bit off to either the left or right.  Is that sort of what your drawing looks like?  Well, this point of view has been dubbed the “canonical perspective” and it’s today’s business thought. Continue reading

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Filed under Consulting, Helpful Hints