Get your brain in motion

Month: January 2016 (Page 2 of 2)

Don’t worry, be rational

Franz MarcIt is rarely worth to worry. It does not mean one should deal light-heartedly with potential problems; rather, worrying is not the best stance to face those.

Much better would be to rationally assess whether it exists a concrete risk or not. If yes, instead than staying idle paralyzed by worry, it would be appropriate to take action and promptly devise a strategy to prevent it, or, even better, to harness the risk into an opportunity. In case the looming menace fades when confronted with reason, one can once again smile to life.

Here, you can find 7 Strategies to stop worrying and start living.

 


Franz Marc, Horse in a landscape (1910), Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Brainstorming

Mike Brown has tried to figure out how big a brainstorming group should be in order to maximize the number of new ideas. Here are five significant suggestions:

  1. Having too many participants may result in people sitting back and not actively contributing with new ideas;
  2. Having too little participants may not let us fully exploit the potential of group – thinking in generating new ideas;
  3. When participants are especially different and at a good level of expertise in strategic thinking, even two or three people may constitute a fruitful brainstorming group;
  4. In other conditions, it would be wise to have a group of no more than  eight – ten people: in larger groups people often just listen to one person come up with ideas;
  5. If we have to work with larger groups, a solution would be to create smaller groups, working simultaneously on identical or related parts of the same exercise.

Ultimately, the key is to find the perfect balance between maximizing each participant’s time to contribute individually with the opportunity to hear other people ideas, in order to fully exploit the potential of strategic group – thinking.

 

Brainstorm

 

Image: FlickrAndy Mangold (CC BY 2.0)

Satisfaction

The Diplo calendar 2016 realized by Stefano Baldi and Ed Gelbstein presents a selection of quotes from the Classical World for living and working better.

For the month of January the selected quotation is by Epicurus, ancient Greek philosopher as well as the founder of the school of philosophy called Epicureanism. For Epicurus, the purpose of philosophy was to attain the happy, tranquil life.

He who is not satisfied with a little is satisfied with nothing

Calendar 2016 Festival_im_Page_04

Photo credit: Paul Hocksenar  (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

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