Career and Leadership Strategies |
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CRG Weekly eZine
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August 20, 2007
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Greetings!
Have you ever noticed that some people seem to be natural
born problem solvers? Look closer, and you'll discover that problem
solving is more a skill than a gift.
Effective problem solvers share ten common characteristics.
Incorporate these top ten characteristics and dramatically improve you problem solving capabilties.
 Andy Robinson Head Coach
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Top 10 Characteristics of Effective Problem Solvers:
1. They have an "attitude"!
Simply expressed, effective problem solvers
invariably see problems as opportunities, a chance to learn something
new, to grow, to succeed where others have failed, or to prove that "it
can be done". Underlying these attitudes is a deeply held conviction
that, with adequate preparation, the right answer will come.
2. They re-define the problem.
Problem solving is a primary consulting skill.
Seasoned consultants know that, very often, the initial definition of
the problem (by the client) is incorrect or inadequate. They learn to
discount statements such as, "Obviously, the problem is that ..." and
follow their own leadings, but ...
3. They have a system.
Perhaps the most common model is the old consulting
acronym: DACR/S in which the letters mean Describe, Analyze, Conclude,
and Recommend/Solve. As with many formulae, its usefulness stems from
the step-by-step approach it represents. Effective problem solvers take
the steps in order and apply them literally. For example, in describing
the problem (the first step), they strenuously avoid making premature
judgments or ruling out possibilities. In analyzing the information,
they are careful that their own prejudices do not interfere. In
developing conclusions, they are aware of the need to test them
thoroughly. Finally, most astute problem solvers recognize that there
is almost always more than one solution, so they develop several
alternatives from which to choose.
4. They avoid the experience trap.
The world is becoming increasingly non-linear.
Things happen in pairs, triads, and groups and often don't follow
traditional lines from past to present and cause to effect. In such an
environment, where synchronicity and simultaneity rather than linearity
prevails, past experience must be taken with a grain of salt. Seasoned
problem solvers know the pitfalls of relying on what worked in the past
as a guide to what will work in the future. They learn to expect the
unexpected, illogical, and non-linear.
5. They consider every position as though it were their own.
For effective problem solvers, standing in the other
person's shoes is more than a cute saying. It's a fundamental way of
looking at the problem from every perspective. This ability to shift
perspectives quickly and easily is a key characteristic of effective
problem solvers. As one especially capable consultant put it, "I take
the other fellow's position, and then I expand upon it until I
understand it better than he does".
6. They recognize conflict as often a prerequisite to solution.
When the stakes are high in a problem situation, the
parties are often reluctant to show their hands and cautious about
giving away too much. In such instances, managed conflict can be an
effective tool for flushing out the real facts of a situation.
7. They listen to their intuition.
Somewhere during the latter stages of the
fact-finding (description) process, effective problem solvers
experience what can best be called, "inklings"--gut-level feelings
about the situation. When this happens, they listen, hypothesize, test
and re-test. They realize that, while intuition may be partially
innate, effective intuition is overwhelmingly a developed faculty--and
they work to develop it!
8. They invariably go beyond "solving the problem".
On a time scale, just solving the problem at hand
brings you to the present, to a point you might call, ground-zero.
Truly effective problem solvers push further. They go beyond simply
solving the problem to discover the underlying opportunities that often
lie concealed within the intricacies of the situation. Implicit in this
approach is the premise that every problem is an opportunity in
disguise.
9. They seek permanent solutions.
Permanent, as opposed to band-aid solutions, have
two characteristics: (1) they address all aspects of the problem, and
(2) they are win/win in that they offer acceptable benefits to all
parties involved. Symptomatic problem solving, like bad surgery or
dentistry, leaves part of the decay untouched, with the result that,
over time, it festers and erupts. Just for the record, a permanent
solution is one that STAYS solved and doesn't come back to bite you.
10. They gain agreement and commitment from the parties involved.
It's easy, in the heady rush of finding "the answer"
to a problem, to fail to gain agreement and commitment on the part of
everyone involved. For effective problem solvers, just "going along"
via tacit agreement isn't enough. There must be explicit statements
from all parties that they concur and are willing to commit to the
solution. Agreement and concurrence really constitute a third
characteristic of the "permanent" solution discussed above, but they
are so often ignored that it is important that they be viewed
separately.
This piece was originally submitted by Shale Paul, Executive Coach, who
can be reached at shale@shalecoach.com. The original
source is: Written by Shale Paul, Copyright 1996, Coach University. May
be reproduced or transmitted if done so in its entirety, including this
copyright line. |
Quotes to Inspire
RELATIONSHIPS:
The greatest gift you can give to somebody
is your own personal development. I used to say
"If you take care of me, I will take care of you."
Now I say, "I will take care of me for you,
if you will take care of you for me."
--Jim Rohn
LEADERSHIP/SUCCESS:
Silence is often misinterpreted, but
never misquoted.
MOTIVATION/INSPIRATION:
Tomorrow is now.
--Eleanor Roosevelt
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