Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Our Recommendation of a Military Warfare Book
Sunday, September 26, 2010
The Art of the Focus (8): Stop and Become Aware.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Pragmatic Practices (5): Understanding the Importance of Time
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Competing in the Global Economy: Are You Driven?
Saturday, September 18, 2010
A Brief Update on Our "Strategic Assessment" Book
Someone recently asked us about our book's launch date. We are currently adding more interesting case studies and more test cases.
For the newbies, our book is focused on our interpretation of the various strategic principles from the Art of War and other Chinese strategy classics. It will show the connection between those principles with another popular set of western business principles.
We will also discuss the unique concepts of our Strategic Assessment process and show a comparison of our strategic assessment process to the popular (but partially-efficient) SWOT approach.
It also encompasses the rules of strategic assessment from various viewpoints. We will post more information on our book endeavor as it reaches the completion stage.
If you have any questions and comments, please contact us at http://www.formspring.me/Compass360CG
Thanks for your patience and support.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Failure to Plan is to Plan For Failure (2)
Here are some of their tips:
- Take offensive coordinator Jimmy Raye out of the booth and put him on the sidelines where he can transmit the play directly in to the Smith's helmet. Plays must come in from the sidelines and not the booth, so Raye relays the call to quarterbacks coach Mike Johnson who then sends it to Smith. Should Raye take to the sidelines, the middle man is eliminated.
- Put the numbered plays on a wrist band and instead of communicating a long play such as "X call, hustle 2, I right slot, two man counter easy," three times, Raye simply calls out a number that Smith cross checks on his wrist band with the play that's being called. So then Smith is the only one communicating the entire play, which saves time and confusion.
- Make a set time when Smith eschews the call coming in and simply calls his own play. "We've talked about that," Smith said. For example, if Smith doesn't get the play with 24 seconds left on the clock, he then calls the play himself.
- Putting the play-calling, at times, completely into Smith's hands. That's not something Smith would like to do all the time. "I have to do a lot already," he said. "That's why we have an offensive coordinator."
All championship bounded teams are usually properly organized and prepared to perform all of those above points with their eyes closed. ... Should the San Francisco Forty Niners have perfected that practice before the season began? ... Can anyone tell the Forty Niners fans what is wrong with this picture?
Compass Rule: Trust a strategist who carries more than enough lead in his pencil.
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Strategic Decisions Without Borders (3)
different remotes. How do you get them to made decisions as a team?
efficiently well at remote locales?
Do you have a process that can get people to
operate effectively as a team?
Since 2006, everyone are still focused on the matters of different locations, time zones, and culture. They do not know how to build a big picture as a team. They do not have a process to make decisions. Nothing has changed. Technology evolves. Jobs are continually being outsourced. Salary and bonuses for the worker-bees declines. Attention span decreases.
This process also allows them to make decisions regardless of the distance, the technology and the project culture.
In future posts, we will explain the beneficial values of Compass AE.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
The Dao of Strategy: Making Decisions
- Is your decision based on connecting the current objective to the big tangible picture?
- What is in your big tangible picture?
- How many variables can you hold in your head?
- Do you have the process that enables you to make decisions?
- Do you have the will to work through the process of making a decision?
- Are you able to see the outcome of a decision in term of risk/rewards and risk/consequences?
- Can you make decisions under extreme pressure?
- Can you implement your decision effectively?