49分

Better Problem Solving (Rebroadcast‪)‬ Humans at Work with Michael Glazer

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Problem-solving is a crucial skill for so many jobs, so why aren’t we taught how to do it properly? This conversation dives deep into research-backed process and techniques that help businesspeople and their teams navigate and solve problem better and faster.
Arnaud Chevallier is a co-author of Solvable: A Simple Solution to Complex Problems. He is also a Professor of Strategy and decision making at IMD where he prepares executives for the strategic challenges that organizations face in today’s dynamic global marketplace by helping them make better decisions in volatile and uncertain conditions. Arnaud has consulted with multiple organizations across industries, including the United Nations, SAP, STADA, and Shell.
Originally aired as episode 73.
 
If you enjoy the show, please rate it on Spotify or iTunes and write a one-sentence review. Your ratings and reviews help more people like you discover the podcast!
 
Episode Highlights
3:25 Complex and ill-defined problems
5:31 Famous, historical example of solving a symptom and not the cause
9:09 How to effectively frame a problem
11:24 Examples of effective problem framing
12:08 The problem with how companies are framing Return To Office
13:13 Too much vs too little stakeholder engagement
15:58 How much info is needed to frame a problem well
17:09 The value of taking a probabilistic approach
19:39 How to prevent info overload when framing problems
21:55 What differentiates how great teams approach problems
22:57 Engagement is about more than inviting people to the table
26:20 Balancing establishing credibility and showing vulnerability
27:26 Approach for mapping out solutions to problems
31:36 What MECE is and how to apply it in problem solving
34:35 How much mapping is needed for complex problems
36:16 Example of how diverse thinking leads to breakthrough solutions
38:50 Addressing our blind spots in problem solving
41:35 How to agree on evaluation criteria when choosing a solution
 
Arnaud’s view on the greatest unmet wellbeing need at work today
"Stress and and realizing how much stress is crippling us. And I'd say let's start with this. I think there's been a oh, there is an ongoing shift from being 'the tough people' to admitting we don't have all the answers and [admitting we have] vulnerabilities. And when we're in stressful situations, we should be able to speak up and look and ask, 'okay, how do we overcome this?'"
 
What “working with humans” means to Arnaud
“I trained as an engineer, [and as it relates to] problem solving, it's a science. It's also an art. So working with humans, what I love is the fascinating interactions between the science and the art.”
 
Resources
Follow: on LinkedIn and through IMD
Read: Solvable: A Simple Solutions to Complex Problems
Read: Adam Grant on having a "challenge network" (Knowledge at Wharton)

Problem-solving is a crucial skill for so many jobs, so why aren’t we taught how to do it properly? This conversation dives deep into research-backed process and techniques that help businesspeople and their teams navigate and solve problem better and faster.
Arnaud Chevallier is a co-author of Solvable: A Simple Solution to Complex Problems. He is also a Professor of Strategy and decision making at IMD where he prepares executives for the strategic challenges that organizations face in today’s dynamic global marketplace by helping them make better decisions in volatile and uncertain conditions. Arnaud has consulted with multiple organizations across industries, including the United Nations, SAP, STADA, and Shell.
Originally aired as episode 73.
 
If you enjoy the show, please rate it on Spotify or iTunes and write a one-sentence review. Your ratings and reviews help more people like you discover the podcast!
 
Episode Highlights
3:25 Complex and ill-defined problems
5:31 Famous, historical example of solving a symptom and not the cause
9:09 How to effectively frame a problem
11:24 Examples of effective problem framing
12:08 The problem with how companies are framing Return To Office
13:13 Too much vs too little stakeholder engagement
15:58 How much info is needed to frame a problem well
17:09 The value of taking a probabilistic approach
19:39 How to prevent info overload when framing problems
21:55 What differentiates how great teams approach problems
22:57 Engagement is about more than inviting people to the table
26:20 Balancing establishing credibility and showing vulnerability
27:26 Approach for mapping out solutions to problems
31:36 What MECE is and how to apply it in problem solving
34:35 How much mapping is needed for complex problems
36:16 Example of how diverse thinking leads to breakthrough solutions
38:50 Addressing our blind spots in problem solving
41:35 How to agree on evaluation criteria when choosing a solution
 
Arnaud’s view on the greatest unmet wellbeing need at work today
"Stress and and realizing how much stress is crippling us. And I'd say let's start with this. I think there's been a oh, there is an ongoing shift from being 'the tough people' to admitting we don't have all the answers and [admitting we have] vulnerabilities. And when we're in stressful situations, we should be able to speak up and look and ask, 'okay, how do we overcome this?'"
 
What “working with humans” means to Arnaud
“I trained as an engineer, [and as it relates to] problem solving, it's a science. It's also an art. So working with humans, what I love is the fascinating interactions between the science and the art.”
 
Resources
Follow: on LinkedIn and through IMD
Read: Solvable: A Simple Solutions to Complex Problems
Read: Adam Grant on having a "challenge network" (Knowledge at Wharton)

49分