Proper Planning for Success: Simplify [7P Productions]

Pure simplicity.
image source: emdot

Sometimes we sabotage our own efforts without realizing it. A bad plan can doom a project even before the first step is made. Proper prior planning prevents pitifully poor performance.

There are many guidelines for a successful plan. One of them is so important that there are different ways to describe it: Less Is More. Parsimony. Occam’s Razor. Keep It Simple Stupid.

The rule is a familiar one, yet it’s a common reasons why a plan fail. What can we do to avoid this mistake?

Simplicity is such an important aspect of planning that the US military identified it as one of the nine principles of strategy. Having a simple plan is seems obvious enough that it’s taken for granted. However, it can take more effort to make a plan less complicated. Whether you’re making a plan for others or for yourself, here are some tips on keeping things simple.

“Important” Does Not Mean “Big and Complicated”

“Think simple” as my old master used to say - meaning reduce the whole of its parts into the simplest terms, getting back to first principles.
-Frank Lloyd Wright

A common mistake is having the expectations of an important task being big and complicated. The level of importance should set the level of attention, not the level of difficulty. If it’s important, all that means is it needs more monitoring rather than more complexity or effort.

Complicated.
image source: .A.A

Stop Trying to Do Too Much

It seems that perfection is reached not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
-Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

We live in a hyper-productive world and we’re increasingly wanting to multi-task and to add goals on top of more goals. Typically, these extra goals are frivolous and do not add value as much as add distraction from the most important things. Pare down goals to their bare essentials.

Shortest Distance is a Straight Line

Simplicity means the achievement of maximum effect with minimum means.
-Koichi Kawana

Sometimes we get so caught up with the process that we lose sight of the purpose. As a techno-geek, this is a big weakness of mine. I would want to show off a cool gadget that I need to add more complexity to a problem in order to use the gadget.

Do you ever find yourself doing something in a convoluted sort of way because you were more interested in how to get there rather than the destination itself? That can be OK only if you know up front that you’ve prioritize the path over the destination.

Use Reliable Means

Things should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.
-Albert Einstein

If you do something with a 90% chance of success, you should feel pretty confident that you will succeed. If you have to do it repeatedly for ten times, you should feel pretty confident that at some point you will fail. Don’t take unnecessary shortcuts for the sake of simplicity, because it can be more expensive in the end.

Zen at work.
image source: tyco24

Our lives are frittered away by detail; simplify, simplify.
-Henry David Thoreau

Simplicity is not just a way to plan, but is also a way of life. The most important things can be lost if we don’t make the effort to keep things simple.

Original post here: Al at 7P

22 April 2008 | Planning, Use What Works in Practice, progress, pursuit | Comments

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