Part 1: What is The Problem? 1. A Problem 2. Peter Pigeonhole Prepared A Petition 3. What's Your Problem?
Part 2: What is The Problem? 4. Billy Brighteyes Bests The Bidders 5. Billy Bites His Tongue 6. Billy Back To The Bidders
Part 3: What is The Problem Really? 7. The Endless Chain 8. Missing The Misfit 9. Landing On The Level 10. Mind Your Meaning
Part 4: Whose Problem Is It? 11. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes 12. The Campus That Was All Spaced Out 13. The Lights At The End Of The Tunnel
Part 5: Where Does It Come From? 14. Janet Jaworski Joggles A Jerk 15. Mister Matczyszyn Mends The Matter 16. Make-Works And Take-Credits 17. Examinations And Other Puzzles
Part 6: Do We Really Want To Solve It? 18. Tom Tireless Tinkers With Toys 19. Patience Plays Politics 20. A Priority Assignment
Written with obvious and playful humour, a short book on problem solving. "A problem is a difference between things as desired, and things as perceived" - and this book goes on to arm you with a number of problem solving techniques, from the venerable "ignore the problem" to understanding just what the problem is, whether the solution is desirable, whether people will believe you've solved the problem, who's problem it actually is, and defining problems well.
Some funny lines too: "Once the rumor starts, it spreads like a muscle spasm in management's lower back."
I have read some chapters thrice already. The contrived examples draw chuckles at how real they are and how you have been solving problems without knowing you are solving one. There are 23 key lessons but I loved three specific takes:
Find out, whose problem is it. 1. We never have time to do it right, but we always have time to do it over 2. People seldom know what they want until you give them what the ask for 3. Find out, whose problem it is i.e. WHO has a problem?
Highly recommended. The book also has some dry humor. You'll love it. Pick it up now.
I like the point of the book, but it gets repetitive and most the examples are (purposely?) contrived.
It's been a while since I read it, but I think some of my takeaways were: - who's problem is it (who cares)? that will usually give you a clue on how to get it solved - should you be the one solving it? - if you cannot solve it, then make it a problem for the person who can (make that person care) - does it needs to be solved / is it a real problem? - don't jump to a solution / blindly go along with a proposed solution
All of which are things I have heard but often fail to apply.
As a software developer who has to deal with clients, it's important to understand that when people ask for something, they often don't realise that what they're asking for is actually pretty dumb and there's something much better that can be built for them. And the trick is helping them to understand this without making them feel dumb.
Anyway, this book is about that kind of thing. It's full of ways to think about problem solving, even including whether a problem should be solved in the first place. Sometimes people's perceptions can be changed instead, which make the problem disappear.
This book is a very quick read. The art is pretty darn average but it's serviceable. It's the kind of book that deserves to be read multiple times to get the most out of it. This is my second reading and I can see myself reading it again in the future.
As with Edward de Bono, this is a useful guide to avoid errors in thinking. We have horseblinds that we are blind to, and this book helps us see them. The authors remind us that clearly identifying the problem is the first step, and a truly challenging one at that. Yet, this is only the beginning. Everything done to solve the problem, influences the environment where the problem was found, and this complicates everything.
The key contribution of this book is to acknowledge and explain the human element of solving problems
Typically, I avoid reading business books published back in the day. Unlike fiction, business advice tends to age badly. More dedicated readers with fewer children might think that wrestling with bad economic theory, monotonous writing style, and casual sexism/racism remarks to discover a few nuggets of insight is a fair trade. Not me. I consider my time too precious (and my mental state too fragile) to be indulging in such pastimes.
As a result, I approached "Are your lights on?" with a lot of caution. Oh, how wrong I was. In a nutshell, this book breaks all the rules of modern publishing, which is exactly what makes it such a valuable read. But let's start at the beginning. "Are your lights on?" could be best described as a light-hearted introduction to problem-solving. Each chapter contains half a dozen of real-life problems, lots of unconventional solutions, and pithy slogans helping the reader to learn a bigger lesson hiding in the story.
Authors Donald Gause and Gerald Weinberg have amassed an impressive collection of anecdotes in the book. They'll take you through rigged public tenders and encounters with dour-faced communist functionaries to petty office squabbles, so well portrayed in "The Office," and engineering challenges faced by traffic authorities in Switzerland.
One would struggle to find a common thread running through all these solutions. It's not one of those books peddling a big theory or an exhaustive list of heuristics. Instead, it invites you to approach problems like a multi-faceted puzzle. Sometimes you'll solve them by focusing on technical facts, other times you'll have to navigate the social context or get creative with wording your problems.
Take an example from a company manufacturing toys. A new employee runs cost calculations and comes to a shocking conclusion that the company would save money by closing two out of three factories it runs. He shares his discovery with senior executives but, to his surprise, they thank him for the effort but burry the cost-saving measure. "Why?" asks the bewildered employee, "Don't you want to cut the cost of running a company?"
"The real reason we continue to produce toys in those factories," responds one of the executives, "is not economic, but political." The loss-making factories are located in the cities where the company president and chairman of the board live. And the lesson here is that "in spite of appearances, people seldom know what they want until you give them what they ask for." If you enjoy this kind of practical wisdom, you'll love the book.
One of the biggest sins of modern publishing is word inflation. How many business books out there should have been articles? A good 80%, if not more. By contrast, "Are your lights on?" is refreshingly concise. At 150 pages, with lots of quirky illustrations, chapters chase one another. It took me barely three hours on a rainy Sunday afternoon to get through the book.
And those three hours were accompanied by a constant chuckle and even occasional guffaws. Messrs Gause and Weinberg have a great sense of humor and aren't afraid to poke fun at pompous men and women inhabiting corner offices of American corporations or presiding over visa formalities in communist Poland. Heck, they even let some characters die in the process of solving problems. George R. R. Martin would have been proud.
The biggest insight of the book, however, lies in the way it frames business problems. Whereas modern business books assume that each problem is worth solving and has a discrete solution, this book takes a very different perspective. To Gause and Weinberg, problems are products of social relations and therefore should be approached with the same pragmatic attitude: some will be worth solving, others - ignoring.
I picked up this book because I read and very much enjoyed reading Gerald’s book on systems thinking when I was a college student.
This book is short and easy to read. Written in a colloquial manner.
My main takeaway from the book is don’t overlook the importance of how a problem is defined, including whose problem it is and the words that are used. Also, solving a problem often results in undesired side effects. A good problem solver is one that sees the bigger picture and prevents the undesirable side effects.
It's written in an amusing and easy-to-read way, but it meanders quite a bit from a central point/theme.
It hits lots of really interesting points/ideas/witticisms, and leaves you going "hmm" a few times, but it doesn't really give you, say, a systemic approach to problem-solving or problem-diagnosing. It has a few interesting guidelines, but I'd re-title it something like "Musings on problem solving and some lateral thinking stories".
Several anecdotes about solving problems. It shows several more ways to think about the problems. One of my favourite points in this book is - "EACH SOLUTION IS THE SOURCE OF THE NEXT PROBLEM".
This is one of those books which I call “books about thinking itself”.
It’s useful to read such books from time to time, because they let us see the risk of always following our own internal “operating system” and “going with the flow of a thing or process because it was always done THAT way”.
What I like about the book: - illustrations are also part of the learning; they emphasize the material and concepts within the book in a very non-orthodox, but effective way - it's a really short book, so it won't take much of your time to read it, but it will make you ponder afterwards on some of the things you just read - I would recommend this book to any student or worker in a company that has more than 200 employees. I have seen a lot of the phenomena that the book talks about in a corporate setting. You WILL find things to consider within and your behaviour in certain (corporate) situations will definitely change. Maybe one of my favourite quotes from the book that pertains a lot to life/work in global corporations is this: “Even if what we’re solving isn’t the “real” problem, it becomes the real problem to us because we want to solve it - the more heroically the better.” - the book is written in very entertaining and humoristic way which in my opinion is a good thing
You can tell that the author had some kind of programming background and experience; it’s quite easy to see that he understands very well the dynamics within a team/company, especially when it comes to junior developers, so I had a lot of fun with his stories because I know they are so, so true.
Here is a list of my favourite quotes from the book: - “Though many problems must be solved in haste, beware of someone pushing you to hurry. Late in the resolution process, haste makes mistakes; in the first few minutes, haste makes disasters.” - “We never have enough time to do it right, but we always have enough time to DO IT OVER.” - “Habituation: the successive reduction of response to a repetitive stimulus. Habituation allows to cancel out the constancies in the environment, thus simplifying our lives. (…) When we contemplate problems, items to which we are habituated tend to be omitted from consideration.” - “Very early on - really from the beginning - the problem resolver must strive to see the “water” in which the other participants unconsciously swim - the water which will be transmuted to sand when the problem is “solved”.”
TL;DR, great read, lots of interesting points, can be hard to follow at times, language is a little dated.
There were some great and interesting thoughts on what a "problem" is, how they arise, how you might approach them etc. That being said, there were a few times the stories didn't gel particularly well. There were even times the authors seemingly had the same though and stories would cut off with "we won't go further", making the story a little bit redundant, then it switched to a conclusion.
There was also a lot of "post script" after each story to explain what they tried to get across previously, which just felt a little like bad writing to me.
This all sounds like me bashing the book, and it is, but the points they make are good ones and land pretty well for the most part making that part great, but it comes at the cost of wading through some parts you may not care about.
Additionally I found the language used has not aged well at all, and just being inappropriate even for the time it was released. This is something to consider if you're thinking about reading this.
Interesting and short reading. The book invites you to deeply analyze problems and take different approaches. As humans beings, we tend to think we have "figured out" what the problem is, minutes after we have learned of the situation. We sometimes even dare to offer a solution right away. We don't have to be afraid to deeply look into problems and find the true cause behind it.
I really liked the opening story, where the autor puts you in a situation, where you have to figure out what the problem really is regarding the "slow" traffic in a building elevator. The author invites you to be open minded about finding what the problem really is.
There's a series of situations presented, in each of them the problem evolves in terms of complexity. In some of the situations presented certainty is peeled off from the problem statement and the solution. So in the end it turns out that neither the problem statement was correct, nor the solution was correct, even though the process starts with one "solution" and then iterates through more and more failed "solutions" (some of them borderline absurd), none of which fits.
Generally, the point being made is that even though the problem solver thinks they understand the initial problem statement as it was laid out, that too turns out to be incomplete, which they only find out later (either because of unwritten, implicit details that are just absent).
The book also describes some problems in the context of IT (mainly software).
So I think the material presents (in a cautionary style) the difference between textbook problems, and real-world problems where people, interests, politics are involved. So even if something looks like a technical problem, there's always non-technical aspects involving implicit assumptions, incomplete problem statements and implicit restrictions that apply.
I'll give it a 5-star, and I'll have to go back and re-read it at some point.
Very nice book. Often I ask some questions about what is the nature of the problem that I am solving with. I think this book sheds some light in this dilema by explicitly asking you: What the problem really is? Who the problem is affecting? This is a problem for everybody involved? All this questions are often not considered and many "solutions" only creates different problems (often harder than the original one). I am re-reading it in the next year for sure.
Brilliant! I enjoyed reading this book. The serious subject of problem-solving is presented with a good sense of humour. Having experience with identifying and solving problems, I was able to relate to most of the conclusions drawn by the authors and could think of multiple examples that would support those conclusions. Recommended to those who seem to lose their mind by trying to find the best solution for seemingly unreasonable problems.
It’s a collection of contrived just-so stories. The author is clearly impressed by his own intelligence, even though his observations are trite. The author thinks he’s funny (he’s not), and if you know what it’s like to listen to somebody who thinks they’re funnier than they are and won’t stop talking you know what reading this book is like.
This book isn’t good but at least it’s short so it has that going for it, but not much else.
Solving a problem starts with a solid problem definition. Try to be as specific as you can defining the problem and do reality check of the problem definition. There is one fix for all. And one solution can lead to other future problems. Take example of eCommerce, Internet. Now regulations are needed to keep people honest, moral and ethical.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
More than solving problems ,the bigger problem lies in defining what is the actual problem.
This book teaches the art of clearly defining the problem,who does it actually affect and how to uncover more pertinent problems. A very light read with great insights.
Mom Test and Are Your Lights On should be compulsory reading in Product Management
The anecdotes didn't seem to convey the points very well to me, it could just be me. I found it hard to decipher the Aesop's. But there were lots of good take away such as being aware there can never be the solution to all problems. A solution is just a trade off that spawns another problem. That's what I found helpful with this book - building my awareness.
Short and sweet - surprisingly entertaining and fun. Not quite what I was expecting (in a good way) and also does provide some thought provoking ideas, particularly on considering "who really has the problem".
Some valuable insights, so-so delivery. I found some good takeaways in this book, and I liked some of its chapters. Unfortunately, most of the chapters were too verbose for my taste and I quickly skimmed through them.
An interesting read. You don't often ask myself whose problem it really is but you should. Is it really your problem or is someone (your boss, spouse, kids) transferring their problem to your problem?