There are many ways to communicate, as
I got a lesson this morning.
Yesterday, I got a text, which I
misinterpreted, due to lack of detail. We were about to commit
significant resources to an ongoing project when a chance call
degraded the whole effort to much ado about nothing.
Seems to me a text request is best when
the answer is “yes.” A
“no” response could mean “We don’t have that capability” or
“I don’t know,” you figure out which. I see a lot of parents
texting their kids where the answer has to be “yes.” Or else.
So then we discussed how to find
something from several suppliers. Based on previous experience,
calling to ask on the minus side has at best a 50% accuracy factor, and on the plus side is a lot faster
than driving around. So the best response again is “yes,” with a
high probability of no resolution, because the communication broke
down.
There is a Dilbert cartoon sent to me
years ago where the boss is asking why no progress is being made, and
the underling mutters, “Well, I made some calls.” So this is a
long time interest.
Because completion within a defined
time is the desired outcome for this project, we decided to check
likely suppliers by internet and then show up until we get an
acceptable outcome.
A visit has a higher chance of finding
if they really have what we want, and if not, finding an acceptable
workaround.
When you ask for something are you
looking for a reason to stop, a chance to continue looking somewhere
else, or a completed result?
Tips
4 The Big Chair – Find something you didn’t expect!
No comments:
Post a Comment