How To Turn Problems Into
Opportunities
Opportunities
Sometimes
a roadblock sends you down a better path.
The
movie Continental
Divide basically
disappeared without a trace when it came out some 30 years ago, and
that's too bad.
True,
it didn't have much of a plot. As IMDB puts it: "A hard-nosed
Chicago journalist has an unlikely love affair with an eagle
researcher." And it was hard to see Belushi as a true leading
man (as he was supposed to be here.)
Still,
the movie had two things going for it.
1.
A clever script by Lawrence Kasdan (Raiders
of the Lost Ark; The
Big Chill) and
2.
A line that you should always ask yourself when you are confronted
with the unexpected.
Blair
Brown, the aforementioned eagle researcher, takes Belushi into the
wild and on his first glimpse of nature in all its glory he asks, "am
I pleased or frightened?"
It
is the exactly the same question you need to ask when confronted with
what most people would describe as a problem.
Are
you pleased or are you frightened?
Now,
let's be clear. Some problems are exactly that. The computer crashes.
You are stuck in traffic. You develop a 103 degree fever before the
big presentation. Those are problems and there very little you can do
to turn them to your advantage.
But
many of the problems you are confronted with should leave you
pleased.
For
example, you thought you were onto a big idea. You would create an
app that would allow people to search for types of restaurants
(Italian) at specific price points ($50 a head) and automatically
make the reservation for you and put it in your Microsoft Outlook.
However,
when you asked a representative sample of your potential audience
about it, they told you there was no reason to develop the software.
They were happy with the available options like Open Table.
So,
why is something like this good news?
There
are three reasons.
- You learned something. This is no small thing the more knowledge you have the insights you can have.
- You learned this ahead of the competition, people who are actually developing "better" versions of Open Table and the like and who are going to discover there is no market (after they have spent tens of thousands of dollars--or more.)
- The knowledge could take you in another reaction
For
example, when you were talking to the potential customers who
eventually shot down your idea you kept hearing variations on a
theme.
Once
they scored the reservation, many of them thought of the reservation
as an asset and like all assets they wondered if they could monetize
it.
"Wouldn't
it be great if I could sell my reservation to someone who really
wanted it? The restaurant is "hot" and people are waiting
for months to get in and there has to be a market for people who want
to jump the que."
And
similarly, people told you, "you know, I would pay to get into
my favorite place at the last minute."
All
of a sudden, you are testing the idea of playing restaurant
matchmaker.
The
point is you could give up, when confronted with a problem. Or you
could ask yourself, what can I do with this in order to turn it into
an asset.
And
that, with a tip of the cap to Mr. Belushi, is how to turn a problem
into an opportunity
BY PAUL B.
BROWN
http://www.inc.com/paul-b-brown/how-to-turn-problems-into-opportunities.html?cid=em01016week01b
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