"If I have seen further it is only by standing on the shoulders of Giants." Words of Isaac Newton clearly showed his belief that we all gain from those who have experienced before us. No matter how brilliant or driven we are, we can always make greater accomplishments and develop them more quickly when we learn from others experiences.
Now with EXT newest tool MAP (Mission Adaptive Plan) you can stand on the shoulders of those who have completed a least a portion of your planned task and allow those who follow you to benefit from your experience.
When you are faced with a complex problem - whether it is as simple as a long road trip or as complex as a five-year battle against cancer - you must make preparations, plans, and discover resources. MAP gives you an easy method of breaking down these problems into simple steps that will ultimately lead you to your goal. You avoid the confusion, wasted time, and discouragement that often result from the huge number of options that are available to you.
The vision provided by MAP is of hindsight with the timing of insight - you truly have the 20/20 vision that comes from hindsight, but you have it before you have completed your way.
Lewis and Clark the famous adventurers pointed the importance and effectiveness of a MAP-like process.
They were among the first foreigners to make the continent wide journey, but they collected information from those who gone for small portions of the trip. They made themselves knowledgeable in botany, zoology, and medicine as those subjects would be important. They studied the maps and journals of the traders and trappers who had already explored parts of their journey and by the time they went abroad on their expedition, they knew as much about the West as anyone in America.
Along the way, they saw that they needed translators to speak to the Native Americans who lived in the territory that they were traveling through. They recruited Sacagawea to serve as a go-between and mediator.
Even with all their planning, the expedition encountered obstacles and barriers that they had not anticipated. Yet, because they took meticulous notes and created detailed maps, the next group to make the journey did so much more easily.
The MAP process benefits you from previous gone explorers and passes your information to others who are going to involve in similar journeys.
The process is best explained through an example -
From the point of diagnosis to being declared cancer free.Cancer.ext.com (a social network for patients, advocates, and volunteers) is using MAP to provide a step-by-step guide for patients to undergo with .This is attained by breaking down the path of cancer medication into steps such as "Accept your Disease" and "Find a Cancer Sponsor" and then offering resources to allow you to fulfill each step.
More specifically, the path is broken down into Goals, Tasks, and Steps.
A cancer patient fighting with his/her disease might have the following targets
Do Not Fear
2.Organize a Patient Support Network and Local Resources
Gather Finances
4.Prepare for Oncologist Appointments
Get a Second Option
6.Research and Understand the Disease
7.Finalize a Treatment Plan
Get ready for Treatment
After Treatment consultations and Test Results
Take an Anti-Cancer Diet
Go for an Exercise Program
These Goals would then be categorized into the Tasks required to complete them.
Tasks fall into three groups
Organizational - in this case, maintaining Your Medical Records and Organizing Your Finances
Informational - Researching Your Disease, Researching Your Medicines, etc.
Heroic - modeling your step after someone who has suffered from the same experience. Such as, a Cancer Survivor or Volunteer Researcher.
Finally, similar or related tasks are grouped into Steps. Each Step contains a number of Tasks that must be completed in order to progress onto the next Step.
As you move from Task to Task, from Step to Step, and from Goal to Goal, your experiences and methods are recorded and can be published for others to benefit from.
The Mission Adaptive Plan helps you to achieve any goal, no matter how trivial or heroic, and can make you a traveler, adventurer, and native guide, all at the same time.
Now with EXT newest tool MAP (Mission Adaptive Plan) you can stand on the shoulders of those who have completed a least a portion of your planned task and allow those who follow you to benefit from your experience.
When you are faced with a complex problem - whether it is as simple as a long road trip or as complex as a five-year battle against cancer - you must make preparations, plans, and discover resources. MAP gives you an easy method of breaking down these problems into simple steps that will ultimately lead you to your goal. You avoid the confusion, wasted time, and discouragement that often result from the huge number of options that are available to you.
The vision provided by MAP is of hindsight with the timing of insight - you truly have the 20/20 vision that comes from hindsight, but you have it before you have completed your way.
Lewis and Clark the famous adventurers pointed the importance and effectiveness of a MAP-like process.
They were among the first foreigners to make the continent wide journey, but they collected information from those who gone for small portions of the trip. They made themselves knowledgeable in botany, zoology, and medicine as those subjects would be important. They studied the maps and journals of the traders and trappers who had already explored parts of their journey and by the time they went abroad on their expedition, they knew as much about the West as anyone in America.
Along the way, they saw that they needed translators to speak to the Native Americans who lived in the territory that they were traveling through. They recruited Sacagawea to serve as a go-between and mediator.
Even with all their planning, the expedition encountered obstacles and barriers that they had not anticipated. Yet, because they took meticulous notes and created detailed maps, the next group to make the journey did so much more easily.
The MAP process benefits you from previous gone explorers and passes your information to others who are going to involve in similar journeys.
The process is best explained through an example -
From the point of diagnosis to being declared cancer free.Cancer.ext.com (a social network for patients, advocates, and volunteers) is using MAP to provide a step-by-step guide for patients to undergo with .This is attained by breaking down the path of cancer medication into steps such as "Accept your Disease" and "Find a Cancer Sponsor" and then offering resources to allow you to fulfill each step.
More specifically, the path is broken down into Goals, Tasks, and Steps.
A cancer patient fighting with his/her disease might have the following targets
Do Not Fear
2.Organize a Patient Support Network and Local Resources
Gather Finances
4.Prepare for Oncologist Appointments
Get a Second Option
6.Research and Understand the Disease
7.Finalize a Treatment Plan
Get ready for Treatment
After Treatment consultations and Test Results
Take an Anti-Cancer Diet
Go for an Exercise Program
These Goals would then be categorized into the Tasks required to complete them.
Tasks fall into three groups
Organizational - in this case, maintaining Your Medical Records and Organizing Your Finances
Informational - Researching Your Disease, Researching Your Medicines, etc.
Heroic - modeling your step after someone who has suffered from the same experience. Such as, a Cancer Survivor or Volunteer Researcher.
Finally, similar or related tasks are grouped into Steps. Each Step contains a number of Tasks that must be completed in order to progress onto the next Step.
As you move from Task to Task, from Step to Step, and from Goal to Goal, your experiences and methods are recorded and can be published for others to benefit from.
The Mission Adaptive Plan helps you to achieve any goal, no matter how trivial or heroic, and can make you a traveler, adventurer, and native guide, all at the same time.
About the Author:
EXT social network's newest tool MAP(Mission Adaptive Plan) provide step-by-step guide for patients to follow from the point of diagnosis to being declared cancer free and it also makes a person an explorer, adventurer and native guide all at the same time. Click here for an easy way to do your article submissions.
0 commentaires:
Enregistrer un commentaire