Think Out of The Box
Khaled Yousry ,CSP?,CRSP?,CMIOSH ,PMP?,IDipNEB,CSM,MSc ??
??LinkedIn Top Voice QHSE Consultant & Trainer @ Kuwait Oil Tanker Company | CSP, CRSP, NEBOSH, CSM, STS
Dearest Professionals In my Respected Network :
Since I was working in Henkel Company Ten Years back , our mates in headquarter teaches us to always think out of the box , it means you always consider the unconsidered probabilities , it similar to WHAT IF strategy.
This concept started in Henkel to focus on defects prevention and mitigation. However I still using it to sharpen our HSEMS .
The following item by "Margaret Rouse"
"Out of the box" is an expression that describes nonconformal, creative thinking. The term is used as an adverb to describe the thinking or as an adjective to describe the ideas. The term is said to derive from a famous puzzle created by early 20th century British mathematician Henry Ernest Dudeney, in which someone is asked to interconnect nine dots in a three-by-three grid by using four straight lines drawn without the pencil leaving the paper. In order to be successful, the puzzle solver has to realize that the boundries of the dot array are psychological. The only way to solve the puzzle is to extend the lines beyond the artificial boundry created by the nine dots. One also thinks of the expression "boxed-in," or having reduced choices. In the fast-paced world of information technology, employers often say they are looking for someone who "thinks out of the box." Older, related but really different terms include blue sky, far out, and off the wall. A variation is "outside the box."
QHSE & HSE Consultant | Occupational Health & Safety Expert | GP & Corporate Health Advisor | Patient Safety & Wellbeing Leader | NEBOSH, OSHA, ISO 45001 Certified
8 年Dear Khaled, thanks for these valuable info. However, I personally prefer using clear expressions e.g. beyond expectation for describing the thinking of some body who looks at the problem from a different prospection.