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Monday, January 3, 2011

measurement Tips From Table Tennis



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Recently I have been spending some time with my husband playing Table Tennis in our garage after work. I'm new to Table Tennis, so it's a steep studying curve. And even though a lot of my attention was on hitting the ball back and landing it on the table instead of skewing it off toward the tool rack or up into the fluorescent lights, I couldn't help reflecting on how similar the sense was to any kind of execution revising in business. In fact, here are the six tips that studying table tennis (or trying anything new) can teach us about improving the execution of anything:

Tip #1: Be very clear what result you want.

Table Tennis

When you start out with something new, aiming to be the best at it right away is not what I call realistic goal. So rather than set my immediate sights on thrashing my husband by the end of our first table tennis match, my focus was more modestly on just hitting the ball back and having it land where I intended it to go. With such a clear goal in front of you, it's so much easier to reach it, one logical step at a time. (Your eyes know exactly what to look at and what to look for.)

measurement Tips From Table Tennis

Tip #2: If you're not good at it yet, expect high variability in your performance.

With itsybitsy skill or knowledge about table tennis, I could only expect to have itsybitsy operate over where I put the ball, and with itsybitsy operate I could only expect to have itsybitsy predictability in my results - the length between where I intended the ball to land and where the ball indeed landed fluctuated randomly and wildly. Understanding (and measuring) your variability is your baseline - understand this natural variability before you exertion to improve anything.

Tip #3: To indeed improve, convert only one thing at a time.

As easy as table tennis is, there were many things that I could have changed to try for a better result. How I held the paddle, how I positioned my feet, how I moved my wrist, how hard I hit the ball, how accurately I read the spin that my clever husband put on the ball (in his wicked attempts to make my returns even more unpredictable). I found I improved best (very satisfying) when I concept about just one thing to do better, like holding the paddle consistently and at the right angle. revising happens so much faster when you bed down one revising at a time. Trying to outline out the complex interactions among several changes at once is confusing, exhausting and takes many times longer to get results.

Tip #4: execution will probably grow worse right after you start improving something.

The occasion I became more known of how I was holding the table tennis paddle, things got worse. The ball seemed to grow a mind of its own for the next 10 to 15 hits. Yes it did more often land where I intended it to, but it would also unpredictably ping off at the most obscure angles. However, it didn't take long to get a feel for the new grip on the paddle and - lo and sight - the ball began doing mostly what I wanted it to. I had more control! Any kind of execution revising can have a 'bedding in' period, but then things can grow better roughly in an instant.

Tip #5: Keep focused - if you take your mind off it, you lose operate again.

Pumped by my quick success at bossing the ping pong ball around, I concept I could let go and relax into the game a little. Big mistake. A few fast and furious returns from my loving husband's paddle made me promptly aWare that holding a table tennis paddle wasn't yet second nature. The ping pong ball 'pertwanged' out my operate and was at the sole mercy of my husband. So remember, if you take your mind off an improved convert before it becomes second nature, you risk losing operate again and the variability widens once more.

Tip #6: Get feedback regularly, and don't misinterpret it.

"You're hitting down again!" My husband was sounding like a broken description (now there's a metaphor that's losing relevance!). So again I lifted up my swing to precise for the mistake. "You're hitting down again!" (He's a very patient man.) What?! Then I asked him what he meant and it turned out that his idea of hitting down meant my paddle was at the wrong angle, but I interpreted it to mean my swing was at the wrong angle. Assumptions! So make sure you track the changes made by your revising frequently sufficient that you can precise things if they go askew - but make sure you know what the feedback is telling you.

measurement Tips From Table Tennis



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