LEVITAT


The Pursuit of WOW! #39 - part 2

An extract from ‘The Pursuit of WOW!’ by Tom Peters:What if we managers put rebirth at the top of our agendas? … suggestions:

  • Do something different. One company gives its telemarketers a whole day “off” each week to work on productivity-improvement projects. In addition to rekindling energy for the primary job, project payoffs have more than covered the costs of the extra staffing required. I can imagine such an approach applied almost everywhere.

My own thoughts on this? I think getting people to work on ‘new’ areas, not even necessarily directly related to their work, is hugely beneficial. It makes people think about different problems; which leads them to look at problems in a different way. Who knows what they will find when they then bring that new way of looking back to their old problems…



The Pursuit of WOW! #39 - part 1

An extract from ‘The Pursuit of WOW!’ by Tom Peters:

What if we managers put rebirth at the top of our agendas? … suggestions:

  • Take a serious daily break. I’m worried about my new, high-speed Canon copier. What will I do now for a break? I find - seriously - that many of my best ideas have come while I stood by my old copier, feeding in 75 pages, one at a (slow) time. Planned coffee breaks are one (good) thing, but I’m talking about something else, a real pause to refresh or redirect our brain waves.

My own thoughts on this? I never had that slow a copier, but I do often find that I think up a solution as soon as I stop thinking about the problem. Unfortunately, it is usually just as I’m about to fall off to sleep and I have to wake myself up to write it down incase I have forgotten by morning!



The Pursuit of WOW! #69

An extract from ‘The Pursuit of WOW!’ by Tom Peters:

69. “To learn, fail… If nothing ever breaks, you don’t know how strong it is. Strike out fear of failure… Reward success and failure equally - punish inactivity.” David Kelley, IDEO

My own thoughts on this? I remember John Watson (F1 commentator) pointing out how Michael Schumacher didn’t just drive to the edge of what the car could do, he drove beyond it. He was constantly pushing the car a little too much and correcting it. That way he knew he was always at the limit.

It’s the same in everything you do. You have to go beyond the limit to know where that limit is. But equally, you don’t want to go so far that you can’t catch it once you find that limit. I think you should be like Schumacher, fail small and often.



The Pursuit of WOW!
March 5, 2008, 10:45 pm
Filed under: books, inspiration | Tags: , , , , ,

The Pursuit of WOW!” by Tom Peters is one of my favourite ‘business’ books. It’s packed full of inspiration. I often pick it up at any page and read a few words of wisdom. I’ll probably post a few extracts from time to time.

It’s not illegal for me to do that is it?