Are you solving the right problem ? an HBR jan-Feb 2017 article (and Russian anecdote)

Thomas WEDELL-WEDELLSBORG wrote an inspiring article in the latest issue of Harvard Business Review : « Are you solving the right problem ? » points out that reframing them can reveal unexpected solutions, and greatly help managers solve their teams problems.

He tells us about nice examples and proposes 7 goods practices to reproduce them. The ones that took my attention the most are :

  • 2. Bring outsiders into the discussion (I link this to « Work WITH the stakeholders ») ;
  • 3. Get people’s definitions in writing (functional specifications are answers to « What is it for ? » ;  
  • 4. Ask what’s missing (a nice way to answer « What is it for ? » is to look at dissatisfactions) ;
  • and most of all 7. Question the objective (« What is it for ? ») 

First example : the ‘slow elevator issue’ where people complain about a slow elevator in their corporate building. The usual solutions go to having a quicker elevator. But the author another way to stop people complaining : putting mirrors into the elevators and the halls ! So that people are not sorry to wait anymore, while looking at themselves waiting in the mirror 🙂 Strange,  ins’t it ?

Another example shared is ‘America’s dog adoption problem’ : too many dogs are abandoned for the animal care associations to embrace … So what should they do ? The ‘usual’ solutions go for raising more money for shelters, more advertising to persuade people to adopt the abandoned animals, etc. All this is ok. But do you see another way to solve the problem ? Meaning, another way to put the problem ?!

What is the real objective : To care for abandoned animals ? To make them adopted ? To find them new families ? … But they DID already have a family ! Thad decided to abandon them … A study on why do people abandon animals showed a surprising result : a large part of the former families of dogs DID NOT want to abandon them ! But were forced to do so because they could not afford to care for their dog, very often when it is ill : veterinary costs are high and not covered by health insurance, or when they had to move to a place not fitted for dogs.

So the optimal solution is to work at that level : help people NOT abandon their animal ! By offering healthcare for dogs, or temporary shelter. This costed much less then the other options, and helped dogs as well as families to stay together.

We again find here the same Value(s) approach :

  • 1° what is it for ? To help people formalize their real need
  • 2° What is enough ? To find the simplest solution
  • 3° Work with the stakeholders ! Only them know the answers to these questions

The Value(s) mindset becomes a real ‘problem solving’ methodology, applicable to any issue.

Let me now share a more personal anecdote : I was 2 weeks ago in Moscow Aviation Institute to train Russian aerospace and shipbuilding engineers to the Value(s) method. I read the HBR article presented here in the airport before on boarding, and decided to later write this post. After the 1st day of training where we focused on the Value(s) mindset, Andreï, one of the Sukhoï engineers came to me. All this reminded him of a MAI professor 20 years ago, who told them to take care before starting to design anything, and used a nice example he never forgot : « the slow elevator problem » !!! Incredible, isn’t it ? (of course I had not mentioned my reading during the training).

So this Harvard professor just recycled a 20+ years old russian story … 😉

After all, Russians also launched the first sputnik, the first dog in space, the first man in space ! And all these came from the MAI – Moscow Aviation Institute ! The MAI dean Mr Bogosyan proved it by showing me their R&D workshops : who else put his hand on a REAL sputnik, a REAL soyuz capsule just returned from its landing in Kazakhstan, a REAL lunar module (well, this one did not make the return trip …). Very nice experience for me !

Un commentaire


  1. je découvre ce jour avec stupéfaction que Jean-Louis Le Moigne, auteur de « La théorie du système général » (et mon maître à penser de la modélisation système) a piloté en 2011 un groupe de travail à l’UITC sur « Agir en complexité », où ce même exemple de l’ascenseur est présente, avec de nombreux détails complémentaires : étonnante coïncidence, ou bonne veille académique de nos auteurs américains (et défaut de citation) ?!
    ne jetons pas la pierre : le professeur russe du Moscow Aviation Institute racontait la même anecdote des années avant !?

    http://module-apcxt.accedo.pro/index.php?id=10458&tx_fphressources_pi1%5Baction%5D=getviewdetailsfordownload&tx_fphressources_pi1%5Bcategory_uid%5D=272&tx_fphressources_pi1%5Buid%5D=530&cHash=38dd228b979224f7fc42a0b7137529a8

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