24,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandfertig in 2-4 Wochen
12 °P sammeln
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE COLLECTION OF PROBLEM-SOLVING TOOLS, GAMES AND TECHNIQUES USED BY BRAINSTORMERS, GAMECHANGERS AND TRAILBLAZERS. As working life becomes more complex, we are increasingly faced with problems which may at first seem insoluble. The Smart Solution Book is your guide to solving these problems, whatever their size.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Pamela HamiltonWorkshop Book, The22,99 €
- Max MckeownInnovation Book, The (Book)21,99 €
- Kathleen McMillanStudy Skills Book, The23,99 €
- Jake KnappSprint15,99 €
- Annette ThauThe Bond Book, Third Edition: Everything Investors Need to Know about Treasuries, Municipals, Gnmas, Corporates, Zeros, Bond Funds, Money Market Funds, and More33,99 €
- Vijay GovindarajanThe Three-Box Solution Playbook: Tools and Tactics for Creating Your Company's Strategy30,99 €
- Cara Alwill LeybaGirl On Fire: How to Choose Yourself, Burn the Rule Book, and Blaze Your Own Trail in Life and Business13,99 €
-
-
-
THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE COLLECTION OF PROBLEM-SOLVING TOOLS, GAMES AND TECHNIQUES USED BY BRAINSTORMERS, GAMECHANGERS AND TRAILBLAZERS. As working life becomes more complex, we are increasingly faced with problems which may at first seem insoluble. The Smart Solution Book is your guide to solving these problems, whatever their size.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Pearson Education Limited
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Oktober 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 154mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 302g
- ISBN-13: 9781292142319
- ISBN-10: 1292142316
- Artikelnr.: 45526109
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Pearson Education Limited
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Oktober 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 154mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 302g
- ISBN-13: 9781292142319
- ISBN-10: 1292142316
- Artikelnr.: 45526109
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
David Cotton spent 21 years with Arthur Andersen and PwC before becoming a freelance trainer in 2002. He has worked in four continents and more than 40 countries, delivering a wide range of training in management, leadership, communication skills, business networking, confidence building, dealing with difficult people, change management, business strategy, coaching and mentoring. David’s clients span local and national government and nearly every industry sector and include the European Parliament, European Commission and many of its agencies, the United Nations, BBC, Syrian Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Russian Federal Commission, Croatian MOD, PwC, most of the major Middle Eastern oil and gas companies, Manchester Business School and many others. He has published scores of articles and more than a dozen books, including Key Management Development Models (FT Publishing, 2015).
About the author
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1 - Which tools to use and when
Tools for broad problem areas
Tools for specific problems
Part 2 - Problem solving essentials
Barriers to problem solving
Framing a problem
Stages in problem solving
Preparation for group problem solving
Equipment needed
Part 3 - Problem solving techniques for individuals and small groups
1. Force field analysis and graphical force field analysis
2. Tough questions
3. Ritual dissent (and ritual assent)
4. Brain-friendly brainstorming
5. Reverse brainstorming
6. Procrastination
7. Cartesian logic
8. Brainwriting
9. Individual and collective mind mapping
10. Structured walkthroughs
11. Life through a lens
12. Nominal group technique
13. GROW for problem-solving
14. Head/Heart-Push/Pull
15. Osborne-Parnes critical problem solving process
16. Appreciative inquiry
17. Competitive ideas
18. Why not?
19. MUSE
20. Ishikawa fishbone diagrams
21. Deming’s PDSA Cycle (The ‘Shewhart Cycle’)
22. 3D stakeholder mapping
23. Two words technique
24. The association grid
25. Delphi technique
26. Lotus blossom technique
27. Photographic associations
28. Random word technique
29. Challenging assumptions
30. Metaphorical problem-solving
31. Who else has solved this problem?
32. How-How?
33. The 5 Whys/Question Everything
34. Jelly Baby Tree
35. Future shock
36. What if?
37. What if we didn’t?
38. Reframing
39. Ripple effect (systems thinking)
40. What I need from you
41. Concentration diagrams
42. Pareto analysis – simplified version
43. Solution effect analysis
44. The work map
45. Competing values framework
46. Timelining
47. One question
48. Peer assist
49. Action learning
50. Story circles
51. Swim Lane diagrams (Rummler-Brache diagrams)
Part 4 - Large group problem solving techniques
52. Crawford’s Slip
53. Charrette Procedure
54. Starbursting
55. Open space
56. World café
57. Pro-action cafe
Part 5 - Problem solving business games
When and how to use business games
58. Retirement speeches
59. Convince me
60. Evolution
61. It’s in the news
62. The trial
63. Tortoise and hare
64. Art gallery
65. Proverbial problem solving
66. There are no rules
67. Documentary
68. Pitch Perfect
Part 6 – Sharing and implementing solutions
Sharing solutions
Implementing solutions
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1 - Which tools to use and when
Tools for broad problem areas
Tools for specific problems
Part 2 - Problem solving essentials
Barriers to problem solving
Framing a problem
Stages in problem solving
Preparation for group problem solving
Equipment needed
Part 3 - Problem solving techniques for individuals and small groups
1. Force field analysis and graphical force field analysis
2. Tough questions
3. Ritual dissent (and ritual assent)
4. Brain-friendly brainstorming
5. Reverse brainstorming
6. Procrastination
7. Cartesian logic
8. Brainwriting
9. Individual and collective mind mapping
10. Structured walkthroughs
11. Life through a lens
12. Nominal group technique
13. GROW for problem-solving
14. Head/Heart-Push/Pull
15. Osborne-Parnes critical problem solving process
16. Appreciative inquiry
17. Competitive ideas
18. Why not?
19. MUSE
20. Ishikawa fishbone diagrams
21. Deming’s PDSA Cycle (The ‘Shewhart Cycle’)
22. 3D stakeholder mapping
23. Two words technique
24. The association grid
25. Delphi technique
26. Lotus blossom technique
27. Photographic associations
28. Random word technique
29. Challenging assumptions
30. Metaphorical problem-solving
31. Who else has solved this problem?
32. How-How?
33. The 5 Whys/Question Everything
34. Jelly Baby Tree
35. Future shock
36. What if?
37. What if we didn’t?
38. Reframing
39. Ripple effect (systems thinking)
40. What I need from you
41. Concentration diagrams
42. Pareto analysis – simplified version
43. Solution effect analysis
44. The work map
45. Competing values framework
46. Timelining
47. One question
48. Peer assist
49. Action learning
50. Story circles
51. Swim Lane diagrams (Rummler-Brache diagrams)
Part 4 - Large group problem solving techniques
52. Crawford’s Slip
53. Charrette Procedure
54. Starbursting
55. Open space
56. World café
57. Pro-action cafe
Part 5 - Problem solving business games
When and how to use business games
58. Retirement speeches
59. Convince me
60. Evolution
61. It’s in the news
62. The trial
63. Tortoise and hare
64. Art gallery
65. Proverbial problem solving
66. There are no rules
67. Documentary
68. Pitch Perfect
Part 6 – Sharing and implementing solutions
Sharing solutions
Implementing solutions
About the author
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1 - Which tools to use and when
Tools for broad problem areas
Tools for specific problems
Part 2 - Problem solving essentials
Barriers to problem solving
Framing a problem
Stages in problem solving
Preparation for group problem solving
Equipment needed
Part 3 - Problem solving techniques for individuals and small groups
1. Force field analysis and graphical force field analysis
2. Tough questions
3. Ritual dissent (and ritual assent)
4. Brain-friendly brainstorming
5. Reverse brainstorming
6. Procrastination
7. Cartesian logic
8. Brainwriting
9. Individual and collective mind mapping
10. Structured walkthroughs
11. Life through a lens
12. Nominal group technique
13. GROW for problem-solving
14. Head/Heart-Push/Pull
15. Osborne-Parnes critical problem solving process
16. Appreciative inquiry
17. Competitive ideas
18. Why not?
19. MUSE
20. Ishikawa fishbone diagrams
21. Deming’s PDSA Cycle (The ‘Shewhart Cycle’)
22. 3D stakeholder mapping
23. Two words technique
24. The association grid
25. Delphi technique
26. Lotus blossom technique
27. Photographic associations
28. Random word technique
29. Challenging assumptions
30. Metaphorical problem-solving
31. Who else has solved this problem?
32. How-How?
33. The 5 Whys/Question Everything
34. Jelly Baby Tree
35. Future shock
36. What if?
37. What if we didn’t?
38. Reframing
39. Ripple effect (systems thinking)
40. What I need from you
41. Concentration diagrams
42. Pareto analysis – simplified version
43. Solution effect analysis
44. The work map
45. Competing values framework
46. Timelining
47. One question
48. Peer assist
49. Action learning
50. Story circles
51. Swim Lane diagrams (Rummler-Brache diagrams)
Part 4 - Large group problem solving techniques
52. Crawford’s Slip
53. Charrette Procedure
54. Starbursting
55. Open space
56. World café
57. Pro-action cafe
Part 5 - Problem solving business games
When and how to use business games
58. Retirement speeches
59. Convince me
60. Evolution
61. It’s in the news
62. The trial
63. Tortoise and hare
64. Art gallery
65. Proverbial problem solving
66. There are no rules
67. Documentary
68. Pitch Perfect
Part 6 – Sharing and implementing solutions
Sharing solutions
Implementing solutions
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1 - Which tools to use and when
Tools for broad problem areas
Tools for specific problems
Part 2 - Problem solving essentials
Barriers to problem solving
Framing a problem
Stages in problem solving
Preparation for group problem solving
Equipment needed
Part 3 - Problem solving techniques for individuals and small groups
1. Force field analysis and graphical force field analysis
2. Tough questions
3. Ritual dissent (and ritual assent)
4. Brain-friendly brainstorming
5. Reverse brainstorming
6. Procrastination
7. Cartesian logic
8. Brainwriting
9. Individual and collective mind mapping
10. Structured walkthroughs
11. Life through a lens
12. Nominal group technique
13. GROW for problem-solving
14. Head/Heart-Push/Pull
15. Osborne-Parnes critical problem solving process
16. Appreciative inquiry
17. Competitive ideas
18. Why not?
19. MUSE
20. Ishikawa fishbone diagrams
21. Deming’s PDSA Cycle (The ‘Shewhart Cycle’)
22. 3D stakeholder mapping
23. Two words technique
24. The association grid
25. Delphi technique
26. Lotus blossom technique
27. Photographic associations
28. Random word technique
29. Challenging assumptions
30. Metaphorical problem-solving
31. Who else has solved this problem?
32. How-How?
33. The 5 Whys/Question Everything
34. Jelly Baby Tree
35. Future shock
36. What if?
37. What if we didn’t?
38. Reframing
39. Ripple effect (systems thinking)
40. What I need from you
41. Concentration diagrams
42. Pareto analysis – simplified version
43. Solution effect analysis
44. The work map
45. Competing values framework
46. Timelining
47. One question
48. Peer assist
49. Action learning
50. Story circles
51. Swim Lane diagrams (Rummler-Brache diagrams)
Part 4 - Large group problem solving techniques
52. Crawford’s Slip
53. Charrette Procedure
54. Starbursting
55. Open space
56. World café
57. Pro-action cafe
Part 5 - Problem solving business games
When and how to use business games
58. Retirement speeches
59. Convince me
60. Evolution
61. It’s in the news
62. The trial
63. Tortoise and hare
64. Art gallery
65. Proverbial problem solving
66. There are no rules
67. Documentary
68. Pitch Perfect
Part 6 – Sharing and implementing solutions
Sharing solutions
Implementing solutions