You wouldn't do a Sudoku puzzle in your head. Without that classic 9x9 grid in front of you, there are just too many things to keep track of.
The problems you solve at work are at least as complex as a Sudoku puzzle, yet you probably don't have a structured way to visualize all the aspects of your problem and their relationships?
BrainSwarming Graphs were designed for just this purpose.
BrainSwarming Graphs were designed for just this purpose.
BrainSwarming Graphs keep track of every detail about your problem and put in its is proper place.
When working on your problem, you are either refining your goal by examining constraints and assumptions, considering various resources at your disposal, analyzing resources into their features, or interacting your resources to try to make progress toward your goal.
There is a place on the graph for every type of activity and the BrainSwarming Graph shows you when you have a solution.
When the top part of the graph connects to the bottom part, then you have a potential solution. You have found a sequence of interactions involving your resources (and their features) that accomplish your goal.
You don't have to remember all the details of your problem! It is all there in front of your eyes in one glance.
You don't have to write a detailed report for your colleagues about all of your ideas. You just show them the BrainSwarming Graph and narrate briefly how all of the details so far considered fit together. They can then add their own ideas to the graph you have already built.
Contact Dr. Tony McCaffrey ([email protected]) to start your team on BrainSwarming Graphs.
When working on your problem, you are either refining your goal by examining constraints and assumptions, considering various resources at your disposal, analyzing resources into their features, or interacting your resources to try to make progress toward your goal.
There is a place on the graph for every type of activity and the BrainSwarming Graph shows you when you have a solution.
When the top part of the graph connects to the bottom part, then you have a potential solution. You have found a sequence of interactions involving your resources (and their features) that accomplish your goal.
You don't have to remember all the details of your problem! It is all there in front of your eyes in one glance.
You don't have to write a detailed report for your colleagues about all of your ideas. You just show them the BrainSwarming Graph and narrate briefly how all of the details so far considered fit together. They can then add their own ideas to the graph you have already built.
Contact Dr. Tony McCaffrey ([email protected]) to start your team on BrainSwarming Graphs.