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2013 | Buch

Common Sense

GET IT, USE IT, AND TEACH IT IN THE WORKPLACE

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Über dieses Buch

“He may have an MBA, but he’s got no common sense.” Assessments like that by a boss can stop a career dead in its tracks. Unfortunately, many believe that common sense is a trait you are either born with or you are not. This book dispels that myth. Through the pages of Common Sense: Get It, Use It, and Teach It in the Workplace readers will learn not only what common sense is, but how to acquire it and use it to enhance their careers, increase their confidence, and take better advantage of business opportunities.

Common Sense explores the use—and non-use—of common sense in the workplace and the world around us. It shows how you can become a person of great wisdom and good judgment by simply learning about all the ways people stumble in the thought process. Author Ken Tanner, a seasoned manager, consultant, and former regional vice president for two major U.S. restaurant chains, shows readers how to make better decisions, how to spot and avoid fallacious thinking, how to better assess ambiguous situations, and how to become a mature thinker with a knack for making the right move at just the right time.

Best of all, Common Sense shows how to teach this trait to others, especially subordinates and co-workers who can and will do nonsensical things unless you help them learn to reason through their decisions and actions quickly and confidently. The payoff? Your staff will make you look good, greasing the way for greater responsibility and opportunity. This book:

Takes you through an understanding of the term "common sense"—what it means and what it doesn’t mean. Shows how fallacies create barriers to using common sense. Provides dozens of examples of the application (as well as rejection) of common sense in the business world and elsewhere. Shows how to teach common sense to others.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. What Is Common Sense, Anyway?
Abstract
If left to the U.S. Supreme Court, the term common sense would probably be labeled in the same manner dirty pictures were defined. When asked what constituted pornography, one esteemed jurist noted, “I’ll know it when I see it.” We generally can identify common sense when we see it. Perhaps more important, we find it quite easy to identify when we don’t see it. A lack of common sense can be easily spotted when you hear an excited voice bark, pointing it out, What in the world were you thinking
Ken Tanner
Chapter 2. Perception Is Reality
Abstract
Everyone wants to increase their common sense, right? Of course! But maybe more important than increasing your actual common sense is to increase the perception of your having it.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 3. Common Nonsense Based on Faulty Appeals
Appealing to Nonsense and Making It Personal
Abstract
There are two ways to improve your overall performance in anything. The most obvious is to increase your output of brilliant things. I have found, however, that it is much easierand effectiveinstead, to decrease the output of dumb stuff. Elimination of a negative is usually stronger than the addition of a positive. Perhaps my management philosophy also works with common sense. The most productive way to increase your common sense may be to eliminate any act that makes you appear to lack common sense.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 4. Common Nonsense Based on Muddled Logic
You Want To Run That One by Me Again?
Abstract
The second group of Common nonsense statements features muddled logic. Often the product of lazy preparation or the simple disregard of fact collecting, these gems tend to offer scant support for their main argument. If you take a moment and dissect what was said, you’ll decide that there’s a complete lack of common sense being displayed.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 5. Urban Legends, Conspiracies, and Other Perversions of the Truth
The Absence of Common Sense
Abstract
Technology now allows us to have the entire world's knowledge literally in the palm of our hands. We can communicate anywhere in the world in an instant. We can attend great universities, concerts, churches, or symposiums without leaving our sofa. So what do we use this amazing resource for? Primarily broadcasting funny stories, tweeting aboutLindsey Lohan's latest exploits, and e-mailing pictures of our cat.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 6. Decisions, Decisions, Decisions
Making Good Ones
Abstract
One of my favorite cartoons is from The Far Side. In it, a new arrival in Hell is being tormented by the devil. He is facing two doors—one marked Damned If You Do and the other labeled Damned If You Don’t—while the devil impatiently demands that the newbie hurry up and make a decision.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 7. Commonsense Behavior in the Office
Abstract
I offer a monthly workshop assisting unemployed Boomers. A key part of the workshop is giving them the secret for acing an employment interview. They learn this secret by while we all sing a rousing version of The Barney Song. Yep, the purple dinosaur pretty well covers it all. The paraphrased lyrics:
Ken Tanner
Chapter 8. Teaching Common Sense in the Workplace
Or Learning It
Abstract
In Chapter 2, we learned there are two types of intelligence—common sense and book smarts—which presents an interesting challenge for this particular chapter. We are learning common sense from a book. Does learning common sense from a book make it book smarts? An ethicist might characterize this conundrum as hypocrisy. However, if you will forgive this philosophical faux pas, we’ll use this chapter to outline a few methods you can use to teach your employees to improve their common sense.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 9. Understanding People
The Cornerstone of Common Sense
Abstract
Many years ago, I had a watershed moment in the evolution of my own personal common sense. One morning, just a few weeks before Christmas, my secretary stuck her head in my office and announced, “I want your permission to take next Tuesday off as a personal day.”
Ken Tanner
Chapter 10. When Common Sense Fails
Abstract
All this praise of common sense may be leading you to think of it as an intellectual cure-all. As critical as common sense is to a well-functioning intellect, let’s be careful not to paint it as the all-inclusive trait. Common sense has its limitations and is ripe for misuse. In the words of ancient mapmakers, Here there be dragons.
Ken Tanner
Chapter 11. Coda
Walking Within a Wise World
Abstract
Our journey has explored common sense from multiple angles. We’ve done a pretty thorough job of dissecting the term, but perhaps the best way to identify common sense is—to paraphrase Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart—by seeing it.
Ken Tanner
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Common Sense
verfasst von
Ken Tanner
Copyright-Jahr
2013
Verlag
Apress
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4302-4153-9
Print ISBN
978-1-4302-4152-2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-4153-9

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