How One Plus One can equal 400 times more profit Before the process of creating 2,000 percent solution (finding ways to accomplish 20 times more with the same time, money, resources and effort), I was fascinated to note that most of the best solutions Worldwide major problems have been commissioned by a few people over 400 years before the wide adoption. Consider the mortar in the Roman roads. Visit Italy and you see that the roads are still in use after more than 1500 years. Watch the new concrete roads near your home, and they will soon crumble ice damage, leaving the endless potholes. While the Romans were not great semi-finals carrying heavy loads on their roads. But the Romans were clearly ahead of their time when it comes to making the roads more built to last.
The Romans knew that the ice is the enemy of the roads. The water needs to enter the cracks before it freezes and causes damage. The Romans drew from the pumice which had launched from Etna to create finely ground powder made from glass. When mixed into their mortar, the material became ice resistant.
However, the local contractor to build your concrete road wins the auction based on the lowest price. In this environment, entrepreneurs are unlikely to press for improved roads to be constructed. The contractor is usually coarse material (like sand and finer pieces of gravel) in the concrete. Water finds it easy to enter, freeze and expand, thus destroying the concrete containing these materials rude. Some contractor then obtained to reconstruct the road and make a profit in the second and third, and so on. You and I pay bills through taxes for gasoline. We also need to harmonize our cars more frequently.
Recently, some governments have mellowed. They point out that the concrete is to use fine materials such as fly ash from coal plants. Fly ash is very cheap, even cheaper than the sand and think about your roads to last longer in the future. How long these roads? We have known for decades, but it is a pleasant prospect to consider.
If an obvious solution has been neglected so long, we wondered, "What are we missing?" It turns out that there is a huge backlog of great ideas, we can use to make exponential progress overcome difficult problems. Consider these ways to make exponential progress in detail.
Here is a reminder of what a solution is 2.000 per cent the following: any method of producing a 20-fold increase in income usually with the same amount of time and effort, or to produce the same results from zero to four percent of the time and existing resources. . . or an equally effective combination of these two approaches. The example of the road may be able to match this description, you may be able to build roads that last 21 times longer for less money and effort.
Here's what we have learned about significant improvements. Most people apply the process of 2.000 percent solution to a possibility of improving both. The three most popular choices for creating such solutions have been:
1. Speeding up the slow process that is full of unnecessary delays
2. Accelerating a slow to cost reductions
3. Eliminating errors in an inefficient process
By themselves, these improvements provide remarkable benefits to stakeholders (those affected by the organization or promotion of the individual) and delight those who develop solutions. We congratulate all those who have accomplished such great results.
Relatively few, however, take the road poetic "less traveled" to seek first expanding the use of 21 times, but this road is "all the difference." Why this route more desirable usually avoided? I think it has something to do with poor self-image. 2000 New solution percent creators tell me often during the early stages of their investigation.
Posted on June 8, 2010.