Final 3 Greens
29th Apr 2010, 09:07
Hi All
A longshot, but would be very gratefule for any assistance.
Next week, I will be facilitating a business simulation session in the middle east on behalf of a third party provider and have reaslied that the complexity of the exercise will be far too great for the audience - it's going to be a train wreck.
The only way I can think of avoiding huge loss of face issues is to position the session as a 'flightsim' and sell up the idea that the session is designed to be be very difficult (and hint that failure is expected), so that we can debrief, learn lessons in a 'no fault' environment and avoid the pitfalls in the real world.
Does anyone know of a reference for this approach that I could quote or even better a clip from You Tube or similar (I've already searched, couldn't find one.)
If anyone could help, I'd be really grateful.
A longshot, but would be very gratefule for any assistance.
Next week, I will be facilitating a business simulation session in the middle east on behalf of a third party provider and have reaslied that the complexity of the exercise will be far too great for the audience - it's going to be a train wreck.
The only way I can think of avoiding huge loss of face issues is to position the session as a 'flightsim' and sell up the idea that the session is designed to be be very difficult (and hint that failure is expected), so that we can debrief, learn lessons in a 'no fault' environment and avoid the pitfalls in the real world.
Does anyone know of a reference for this approach that I could quote or even better a clip from You Tube or similar (I've already searched, couldn't find one.)
If anyone could help, I'd be really grateful.