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(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 07:31, 21 April 2006
Problems cannot be solved unless you have an outcome.
Four basic outcome questions:
- What am I moving towards? (The desired state or outcome)
- Why am I moving? (The values that guide you)
- How will I get there? (The strategy for the journey)
- What if something goes wrong? (Risk management and contingency planning)
There are two aspects to outcomes:
- Outcome thinking: deciding what you want in a given situation.
- Outcome orientation: consistently thinking in outcomes and having a general direction and purpose in life.
How to structure outcomes:
- Positive: What do I want?
- Evidence: How will you know you are succeeding/have succeeded?
- Specifics: Where, when, and with whom?
- Resources: What resources do you have?
- Control: Can you start and maintain this outcome?
- Ecology: What are the wider consequences?
- What time and effort will this outcome require?
- Who else is affected and how will they feel?
- What will you have to give up when you achieve this outcome?
- What is good about the present situation?
- What else could happen when you get your outcome?
- Identity: Is this outcome in keeping with who you are?
- How do your outcomes fit together?
- Action plan: What to do next?
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