Musashi's Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone)
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dokkodo
Businessman:
I see this precept as a warning to embrace important things wholeheartedly. In business, as in life, we often face an all-or-nothing equation, one where if we’re going to do something we need to devote all our time and resources until it’s done in order to make sure it is successful. Anything less dooms us to failure. That’s not to say that we cannot multitask at times, but rather that in certain circumstances that tactic will drive a suboptimal result. For example, all too often in large corporations or government institutions projects are understaffed, underfunded, or under-supported, we take our eye off the prize, and then for some strange reason we wonder why we were ultimately unsuccessful. In the end the project cost too much, delivers too little, takes too long, or ultimately never gets done satisfactorily if at all. At any given time we are pulled in multiple directions, various projects and programs competing for our attention. This means that we need to prioritize in order to be able to focus and finish on the most important items to avoid those aforementioned unsatisfactory results. Once we complete our top priorities then we can then move on to the next ones and the ones after that. In business parlance this is called portfolio management, that is the application of a systematic oversight and prioritization process that scrutinizes investments, projects, and activities across the enterprise and then assigns resources to them so that the most important ones get done first. We calculate things like ROI (Return on Investment), IRR (Internal Rate of Return), NPV (Net Present Value), TCO (Total Cost of Ownership), and EP (Economic Profit) in order to identify which ventures will generate the best returns for our investments, but the challenge is that numbers alone, no matter how many of them we study, do not tell the whole story. They are not enough. This is where feelings, honed from intuition and experience, play a vital role. Remember the Ford Pinto debacle of the 1970s? The short version is that failure on Ford’s part to invest in a low value part that would have made their cars safer led to the recall of 1.5 million automobiles, massive lawsuits, and a criminal indictment. One of the tools that Ford used to make decisions in those days was a cost- benefit analysis, a very common tool in business. According to the company’s estimates their unsafe fuel tanks were projected to cause 180 burn deaths, 180 serious injuries, and the destruction of 2,100 vehicles per year. They calculated that the company would have to pay $200,000 per death, $67,000 per injury, and $700 per vehicle, which made for a total of $49.5 million. This was compared against the cost of $11.00 per vehicle to implement the fix which calculated out to $137 million per year, roughly three times the cost of doing nothing. Clearly it was cheaper for Ford to let their vehicles and their customers burn to a crisp, but was that the right thing to do? Obviously not, but that’s the decision they made anyway. Why? In Download 1.13 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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