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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting ideas on how we can be our own guru
Politicians have trusted advisers and strategists who guide them in their every move. There are, however, many professions that require innovative thinking and decision making, and whose practitioners have to be their own strategists. Of course, people in such occupations could do what most people do, which is to use a trusted colleague as a sounding board for their...
Published on August 24, 1999

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too much theory and not enough practical applications...
The author spends half the book proving the theory in a very slow and boring fashion. As a business professional, I was expecting to get some more practical knowledge and not so much theory. Thankfully I bought the book used so all I was out was my time invested in reading it.
Published 21 months ago by Michael Rogero


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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting ideas on how we can be our own guru, August 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement (Paperback)
Politicians have trusted advisers and strategists who guide them in their every move. There are, however, many professions that require innovative thinking and decision making, and whose practitioners have to be their own strategists. Of course, people in such occupations could do what most people do, which is to use a trusted colleague as a sounding board for their ideas. However, many times a colleague is not available, and even if one were, there is no guarantee that he or she will have the level of discernment needed for a particular problem. It is possible to circumvent the lack of a guru, a spin doctor or a discerning friend, by verifying our own ideas before implementing them. Loehle's book Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement, teaches us how to condition our intellect to think ahead so that we can plan a strategy to attain that which is important to us. Naturally, this includes choosing the best path whilst avoiding pitfalls, side-tracking and even derailment from the path. For that, we must learn how to study the particular, while keeping an eye on the whole, and to keep in perspective several logical and causal connections simultaneously. Then, when we master how to think by ourselves, we must learn how to be our own sounding board, that is, how to check our results against all possible errors that can occur during the thinking process and compare them objectively against a known standard. This aspect of strategic thinking is referred to as reality check. The author distinguishes two types: internal and external. The former is important because many of the patterns we perceive are not real but artefacts of our imagination or, may have resulted from an array of potential errors of thinking such as faulty generalization, bad use of logic, incoherence and bad risk checking. The external reality check is like scientific hypothesis testing or the test drive of a new car, and it requires us to submit our result to an array of tests to discredit it, and finally to peer review. One does not need to be a book worm to fully appreciate this book but being reasonably well-read in scientific and technological matters will help to fully appreciate the examples taken from the great innovators. Thinking Strategically is a cornucopia of rich pickings of allegories, common sense and wisdom tempered by the amusing illustrations of Richard Loehle. I recommend this book for anyone challenged to provide novel ideas or solutions to problems still untackled by routine manuals. pires.obrien@netmatters.co.uk
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good content, bad writing, February 28, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement (Paperback)
This book was higly recommended to me by a colleague, and after reading it I realize that the content is indeed very good. But the aridity in the author's writing style sometimes jeopardize the content. The text should be more pleasant to read, with more passion and more fun, but instead, it reads like a scientific thesis, with almost no emotion. The few times the author tries to throw a little humor into the text, it looks like it's out of context. But, again, it is worth reading for the very well structured message about strategic thinking tools and techniques, even if ater a while you become a little bored.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book show you how to be your own guru., August 24, 1999
By A Customer
Politicians have trusted advisers and strategists who guide them in their every move. There are, however, many professions that require innovative thinking and decision making, and whose practitioners have to be their own strategists. Of course, people in such occupations could do what most people do, which is to use a trusted colleague as a sounding board for their ideas. However, many times a colleague is not available, and even if one were, there is no guarantee that he or she will have the level of discernment needed for a particular problem. It is possible to circumvent the lack of a guru, a spin doctor or a discerning friend, by verifying our own ideas before implementing them. Loehle's book Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement, teaches us how to condition our intellect to think ahead so that we can plan a strategy to attain that which is important to us. Naturally, this includes choosing the best path whilst avoiding pitfalls, side-tracking and even derailment from the path. For that, we must learn how to study the particular, while keeping an eye on the whole, and to keep in perspective several logical and causal connections simultaneously. Then, when we master how to think by ourselves, we must learn how to be our own sounding board, that is, how to check our results against all possible errors that can occur during the thinking process and compare them objectively against a known standard. This aspect of strategic thinking is referred to as reality check. The author distinguishes two types: internal and external. The former is important because many of the patterns we perceive are not real but artefacts of our imagination or, may have resulted from an array of potential errors of thinking such as faulty generalization, bad use of logic, incoherence and bad risk checking. The external reality check is like scientific hypothesis testing or the test drive of a new car, and it requires us to submit our result to an array of tests to discredit it, and finally to peer review. One does not need to be a book worm to fully appreciate this book but being reasonably well-read in scientific and technological matters will help to fully appreciate the examples taken from the great innovators. Thinking Strategically is a cornucopia of rich pickings of allegories, common sense and wisdom tempered by the amusing illustrations of Richard Loehle. I recommend this book for anyone challenged to provide novel ideas or solutions to problems still untackled by routine manuals. pires.obrien@netmatters.co.uk
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4.0 out of 5 stars Promising, thought provoking, but not cohesive and does not deliver on the main premise, June 1, 2010
This review is from: Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement (Paperback)
The main premise of the book is that professional productivity requires skill, motivation, and strategic use of time and effort, with the latter being the ultimate key to success. In turn, strategic thinking requires: 1) creativity; 2) discovery; 3) structuring work to bring new creation into fruition. The author also stresses the importance of finding the right problems to solve and ties this with creativity. This is an excellent point, often overlooked.

From the introduction it appears that the book's goal is to teach the strategic use of time and effort. But it falls short there: it provides neither a cohesive conceptual nor a practical framework for achieving that goal. Instead it covers a set of tools useful for thinking strategically, and discusses practical application of those tools to solving problems. The discussion on tools includes sections on discovery as finding of patterns or using paradox and contradiction for identifying and solving problems, which I found interesting. However, as a whole the book does not teach how to think strategically - it only covers some of the tools helpful to achieve that.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What are the three pillars of professional productivity?, July 15, 2001
This review is from: Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement (Paperback)
Knowing how to increase my productivity has benefited me in several ways: monetarily, satisfaction, competitive advantages for myself and clients, etc. Leohle explains why skill, motivation, and strategic use of time and effort results in professional success. Worthy library addition for any thinker.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too much theory and not enough practical applications..., April 17, 2010
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This review is from: Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement (Paperback)
The author spends half the book proving the theory in a very slow and boring fashion. As a business professional, I was expecting to get some more practical knowledge and not so much theory. Thankfully I bought the book used so all I was out was my time invested in reading it.
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Outstanding Professional Guide, January 22, 2005
By 
Phillip Cota (Bethesda, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Thinking Strategically: Power Tools for Personal and Professional Advancement (Paperback)
This is a must-have guide for anyone in, or preparing to work in, a professional field involving scientific discovery, creating things, or solving complex real-world problems.
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