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Productivity

Posted on : 14-09-2013 | By : leeDS | In : General

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You could get rid of what is superfluous and become a more productive person. The goal is not necessarily surrender to the maximum and follow extenuando, but rather get rid of the unnecessary and a life more calm and, at the same time, more productive and efficient. The importance of the Pareto principle reason why it is so important to understand the principle is because it shows a reality which often we are not aware. We assume that all our efforts are more or less the same relevance: all customers are equally valuable all product and all income from sales are just as good all employees of a same category provide the same value all students in a course are guilty by the widespread disorder all of our daily activities are necessary and provide us with the same have the tendency to think that 50% of our contribution generates 50% of the results. We think that there is a logical balance between cause and effect. However, these assumptions are wrong and can cause much damage in our lives, especially because they are so strongly rooted in our mind.

The 80/20 principle shows that typically there is a marked imbalance to the studying the quantitative data of cause and effect. How to implement the Pareto principle in our lives? The secret of success lies in determining which is 20% of our activities that generate US 80% of the benefits. But, did you achieve differentiate which they are activities that bring us the greatest benefits and which are those that overwhelm us, stressed and tired without leaving any fruit? It is not always easy to elucidate things that really increase our efficiency and differentiate them from those activities that we only remove time without making a significant contribution to our lives. Then named different ways to determine the 20% and how we can get rid of the unnecessary and exploit the most effective: as I mentioned earlier, the 80/20 principle can be applied in two ways: traditionally is has been using a method of quantitative analysis that studies the relationship between a cause versus effect data: Pareto diagram.

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