"Tactical Application of Mingliang Sea Battle"

Telly 2022-03-28 09:01:12

[Mr. Zhong said] Day 14: Friends, continue the agreement between you and me yesterday to exchange "Tactical Application of Mingliang Sea Battle". How is "less wins more" applied in your work? The supreme commander of the North Korean naval division, Yi Sun-sin, used all his firepower to attack a small number of enemy ships until a phased victory was achieved. If work is regarded as a goal, how do you and I accomplish work goals in multiples? There can be 4 steps: ① Active response. Knowing that you have a small number of soldiers and insufficient firepower, the wise move must be to take the initiative and plan a response; ② focus with all your strength; since you know your own weakness in strength, you must concentrate all resources and energy on a small goal, and the more the goal is. Clear, the more measurable, the easier it is to achieve; ③ Realize one by one. Don't try to achieve the ultimate goal, but achieve the big goal through the achievement of small goals in stages. ④Review. No strategist has been victorious over and over again. The North Korean naval commander, Yi Sun-sin, also gathered wisdom between the constant victories and defeats, and summarized, reviewed, and repeatedly improved the tactics and military thinking to continuously consolidate them. It is no exaggeration to say that the victory of the "Ming Liang Sea Battle" should have been established many years ago, but the probability of success or failure of the war is unknown. As the saying goes, kung fu is outside of poetry, and victory in war is outside of war. In fact, the same is true of working methods, one goal at a time, concentrate one's time and energy to complete one, gradually realize it, and constantly summarize... With the 4 steps mentioned above, practical practice is used for work, and the improvement of efficiency and ability is only time. That's it. BTW: I do it by doing what I say, asking myself to set goals every day and achieve them one by one without repetition. This topic is extended to read the next article, and will continue tomorrow.

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