Users work differently from makers, for
good reason. If you make a mistake buying a book on Amazon, you can
usually go back an action, or a screen, call it a redo. Makes sense
to just keep hammering keys until you get what you want.
Makers often don’t have redo, so
there’s an emphasis on using a planning and structure to reduce
rework. I cut that board three times and it’s still too short!
Well then, Measure twice, cut once.
Working in an IDE (Integrated
Development Environment – programmer’s code-making software)
discovering an error can require taking out days of development.
The old observation that one programmer
can do the work of a thousand programmers is valid because many
programmers spend the next morning tearing up whey did the previous
day. One step forward, two steps back.
Sales
Lab’s Planned Workcycle addresses the need for Architecture and
Design before Executing, and came from construction contracting. If
you order a crane, it better be busy the whole time it is on-site,
and after it leaves, you best not need that crane again.
The Workcycle also
has an original structure for how to do Evaluation which makes
Evaluation work a whole lot better. I’ve found it increases
efficiency in many types of complex projects.
How does the
availability of Redo change the value of Planning, the process of
Executing?
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