(858) 724 0375 info@drpna.com

In driver’s education, so long in a Washington DC suburb in Virginia, we were taught the IPDE Method to make good decisions quickly under conditions of calm, stress, and emergency.  The instructor noted that several alumni over the years had indicated at homecoming events and the like that the IPDE method had served them well at work, with family, and on the road.

IPDE stands for

I               Identify;

P             Predict;

D             Decide; and then

E              Execute.

Note that the process starts with fact gathering and ends with an action.  Without action,  you can end up in a pile up of “I’ll Get Around To It” projects.  If you need to get around to it, get a tennis ball and write “To It”” on the ball and you have a pretty good reminder in the form of a paper weight.

Of course, getting to a good and timely outcome  under the circumstances, using the available facts at hand, takes some practice, and can help in not becoming motivated into inaction for whatever reason that unfortunate state can happen.  On the road, action is needed quickly, and in life and business, you do not have the luxury of unlimited time to take appropriate action.

Good decisions are usually based on facts, a bit of intuition, experience, and a bit of luck.  You can certainly tip the scales to your advantage by adopting certain processes to get you close or closer to the center of the dartboard.

Not all decisions have good outcomes, but can be better outcomes.  For example, while driving it is better to hit a car than a pedestrian, and so on and so forth.

Of course, not all contingencies can be taken into account, and not all facts are of high reliability, and not all facts are available.  So long as you can say that under the circumstances and facts available at a given point in time that a good decision was made, that may reduce strains and stress of not making a perfect decision, but making a reasonable decision.

 

October 22, 2017

Disclaimer: The materials provided on this website are for general information and educational purposes only and are not intended as, and should not be taken as, legal advice or the formation of an attorney/client relationship. Individuals and entities having intellectual property issues should consult with a patent attorney or patent agent to fully address intellectual property law matters based on an analysis of the particular facts. The attorney members of the firm are licensed to practice law in the state of California, and otherwise as noted.