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Book Description

Problems remain hidden in organizations for a number of reasons, including fear, organizational complexity, gatekeepers who insulate leaders from problems that are coming up, and finally, an overemphasis on formal analysis in place of intuition and observation. This book lays out the key skills and capabilities required to ensure that problems do not remain hidden in your organization. It explains how leaders can become effective problem finders, unearthing problems before they destroy an organization. The book explains how leaders can become an anthropologist, going out and observe how employees, customers, and suppliers actually behave. It then goes on to present how they can circumvent the gatekeepers, so they can go directly to the source to see and hear the raw data; hunt for patterns, including refining your individual and collective pattern recognition capability; "connect the dots" among issues that may initially seem unrelated, but in fact, have a great deal in common; give front-line employees training in a communication technique; encourage useful mistakes, including create a "Red Pencil Award"; and watch the game film, where leaders reflect systematically on their own organization's conduct and performance, as well as on the behavior and performance of competitors.

Table of Contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright Page
  3. Contents
  4. Acknowledgments
  5. About the Author
  6. Preface
  7. Chapter 1 From Problem-Solving to Problem-Finding
  8. Chapter 2 Circumvent the Gatekeepers
  9. Chapter 3 Become an Ethnographer
  10. Chapter 4 Hunt for Patterns
  11. Chapter 5 Connect the Dots
  12. Chapter 6 Encourage Useful Failures
  13. Chapter 7 Teach How to Talk and Listen
  14. Chapter 8 Watch the Game Film
  15. Chapter 9 The Mindset of a Problem-Finder
  16. Index
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