December 2007


I just discovered this note left over from writing Be Unreasonable:

“All unreasonable ideas violate some accepted wisdom.”

That’s a pretty good acid test. If you want to know if your ideas are “unreasonable” then make sure your are contravening something that you were heretofore certain was true.

 


I just read this following passage in Gary Kasparov’s new book, “How Life Imitates Chess.” He has been writing about the phase of a chess game called “nothing to do,” and how greats such as Petrosian and Karpov used this time to eke out small positional advantages.

“In life, there is no such obligation to move. If you can’t find a useful plan, you can watch television, stick with business as usual, and believe that no news is good news. Human beings are brilliantly creative at finding ways to pass time in unconstructive ways. At these times, the true strategist shines by finding the means to make progress, to strengthen his position and prepare for the inevitable conflict. And conflict, we cannot forget, is inevitable.”

Think about these phases in your own business, where you are sitting around, waiting for something else to happen. Could they be used to strategic advantage?

 


Start here: Answer the question, “What am I trying to accomplish?”

Then, “What are some of the ways that can happen?” This will give you the high order possible strategies.

Next, validate that this is, in some way, possible. Use internal and external market research.

Your research opens up the Gap Analysis, and starts to answer the question, What is needed to get THERE?

Consider, “How different is that from WHERE YOU ARE NOW?” and “What are the ways to close the gaps?”

Prioritize which gaps are most important AND most closable AND Have the biggest payoff.

Now: DO THOSE THINGS FIRST


The decks are finally clear. Here are four ways to make a breakthrough:

  1. Figure out what’s working and find a way to do it much more, or much better.
  2. Figure out what’s not working and fix it.
  3. Figure out something from a different discipline and apply it to your own GAP
  4. Invent something new, completely of whole cloth.