Decision Making and Problem Solving
eBook - ePub

Decision Making and Problem Solving

Break Through Barriers and Banish Uncertainty at Work

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Decision Making and Problem Solving

Break Through Barriers and Banish Uncertainty at Work

About this book

In Decision Making and Problem Solving, leadership guru John Adair provides the techniques and insights you need to find solutions, spark creativity and confidently make the right decisions. Fully updated for 2019, this 4th edition now features even more practical exercises, useful templates, and top tips to provide a clear framework that can generate ideas and inspire confidence in your team - so you can spot the solution in every problem, and create ideas to rival even the best strategists. The Creating Success series of books...
Unlock vital skills, power up your performance and get ahead with the bestselling Creating Success series. Written by experts for new and aspiring managers and leaders, this million-selling collection of accessible and empowering guides will get you up to speed in no time. Packed with clever thinking, smart advice and the kind of winning techniques that really get results, you'll make fast progress, quickly reach your goals and create lasting success in your career.

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Yes, you can access Decision Making and Problem Solving by John Adair in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Decision Making. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Kogan Page
Year
2019
Print ISBN
9780749492809
eBook ISBN
9780749492939
Edition
4

Appendix

The solution to ‘Who owns the zebra?’

This problem can be solved by analytical and logical thinking – deductive logic – and persistence! It is necessary to compile a matrix.
Roughly half-way through the problem-solving process there are two forks in the road, or mental leaps. The only way to find out which way to go is by trial and error. If you choose the wrong road, you have to retrace your steps. You can see now why the world record for finding the solution is 10 minutes!
The following is one way of solving the problem.
Keep working through the facts from 1 to 15 in sequence.
Concentrate on clues for which there is only one answer. That is:
  1. There are five houses, each with a front door of a different colour, and inhabited by people of different nationalities, with different pets and drinks. Each person eats a different kind of food.
  1. Milk is drunk in the middle house.
  2. The Norwegian lives in the first house on the left.
  1. The Norwegian lives next to the house with the blue door.
Then look for information that has only two possible answers. This is the first mental leap. That is:
  1. The house with the green door is immediately to the right (your right) of the house with the ivory door.
If you place the ivory door in the middle, with the green door on its right, the answer is wrong, but you can still progress to find out who drinks the water. However, you can go no further.
If you place the ivory door in the fourth house, with the green door on the far right, this answer is correct and you can progress logically, since you will find that other items of information now have only one answer. That is:
  1. The Australian lives in the house with the red door.
  1. Coffee is drunk in the house with the green door.
  1. Apples are eaten in the house with the yellow door.
  1. Apples are eaten in the house next to the house where the horse is kept.
Then look for information that has only two possible answers. This is the second mental leap. That is:
  1. The Italian owns the dog.
If you place the Italian in the house with the green door you are wrong, but you can still find out who drinks the water.
If you place the Italian in the house with the ivory door you are correct and you can progress logically, since you find other items of information now have only one answer. That is:
  1. The Ukrainian drinks tea.
  1. The cake-eater drinks orange juice.
Therefore, the Norwegian drinks water.
  1. The Japanese eats bananas.
  1. The mushroom-eater owns snails.
  1. The person who eats onions lives in the house next to the person with the fox.
Therefore, the Japanese owns the zebra.
Another way of solving this problem is to form a matrix using nationalities rather than house numbers:
Front doors
yellow
blue
red
ivory
green
Inhabitants
Norwegian
Ukrainian
Australian
Italian
Japanese
Pets
fox
horse
snails
dog
zebra
Drinks
water
tea
milk
orange juice
coffee
Food
apples
onions
mushrooms
cake
bananas

Useful tools

Rate your analytical skills

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Table of contents

  1. Creating Success Online Courses
  2. Creating Success Series
  3. Decision Making and Problem Solving
  4. Contents
  5. About the author
  6. Introduction
  7. 01 Your mind at work
  8. 02 The art of effective decision making
  9. 03 Sharing decisions with others
  10. 04 Key problem-solving strategies
  11. 05 How to generate ideas
  12. 06 Thinking outside the box
  13. 07 Developing your thinking skills
  14. Appendix The Solution to ‘Who owns the zebra?’
  15. By the same author
  16. Copyright