Understand - Simplify - Explain
We bought a house about five years ago, and to be honest I’m still learning how everything works.
The quirks of the plumbing, the idiosyncrasies of the heating, the hidden mysteries of the electrics.
And it’s in my nature to understand and improve things (or try!)
Last weekend, I decided to get to grips with all the random wires attached to, or emerging from, the exterior of the house.
They couldn’t all be necessary, surely?
After some detective work, I discovered that one particularly paint-encrusted cable was attached to an ancient satellite dish.
So I ripped that off the wall.
I also traced some long-dead LED lights nestling in the flower beds to a dodgy-looking power socket in the garage.
I stripped those out too.
Afterwards, being me, I had to tell my wife what I’d done and how everything was much simpler and safer now.
All in all, it was a very satisfying couple of hours of work.
And reflecting on it later, I realised it fitted a broader template I almost always enjoy:
Understand - Simplify - Explain
In fact, I use it all the time when building courses.
When you create your own course, I suggest that you U.S.E. the same approach.
You probably have most of the?*understanding?*already. (Although there are always opportunities to go a little deeper.)
When it’s time to?simplify, use the Pareto Principle and ask yourself: “What’s 20% of this topic do people need to understand to get 80% of the results they want?”
And when you come to?explain?it all via the lessons in your course, ask: “How can I bring as much interest and personality to these explanations as possible?”
So let me ask you this:
What topic do you?understand?well, that you could easily?simplify,?and people would love you to?explain?
Because that’s your course, right there.
See you soon,
Glen
Seamstress at Nini Emporium Sewing N Embroidery
1 年I would love to untangled things that seam to have a hidden answer, but yet staring right at me.
Communications & Engagement Manager at Grapevine. Employee ownership advocate. Lifelong collector nerd.
1 年Glen, you've inspired me.. I've got a cable running through the house that I'm 99.9% is an old phone line. It's getting torn out.
Helping mothers, fathers and grandparents pass on their wealth to the next and future generations and prepare the family to receive it.
1 年That's brilliantly straight forward, thanks