How to stop repeating the same mistakes every day?
You recognize that if you start new activities in the 30 minutes before you plan to take your lunch, it increases the chances you’ll get distracted and not go to lunch on time. Therefore, you need to plan activities for the 12:30-1 p.m. period each day that won’t run over time and cause the problem of going to lunch late.
What’s the best way to troubleshoot an IT problem?
Ask those pertinent questions and then dig up more info from various sources such as: Error messages: If the user reports one or you’re present to check for one, they can point you in the right direction as to why a failure occurred.
What’s the best way to change recurrent patterns?
Paradoxically, to change recurrent patterns, it’s often best to assume you will make the same mistake again. When you do this, you can change your focus to developing practical strategies that will help you make less severe mistakes, less often. This tends to be a more successful approach overall.
What’s the most tedious thing to troubleshoot?
Troubleshooting IT can be… tedious (understatement of the year). End users submit seemingly endless problems ranging from complaints of their Internet being “slow” to forgotten passwords to constant printer pains.
You recognize that if you start new activities in the 30 minutes before you plan to take your lunch, it increases the chances you’ll get distracted and not go to lunch on time. Therefore, you need to plan activities for the 12:30-1 p.m. period each day that won’t run over time and cause the problem of going to lunch late.
Ask those pertinent questions and then dig up more info from various sources such as: Error messages: If the user reports one or you’re present to check for one, they can point you in the right direction as to why a failure occurred.
Paradoxically, to change recurrent patterns, it’s often best to assume you will make the same mistake again. When you do this, you can change your focus to developing practical strategies that will help you make less severe mistakes, less often. This tends to be a more successful approach overall.
Troubleshooting IT can be… tedious (understatement of the year). End users submit seemingly endless problems ranging from complaints of their Internet being “slow” to forgotten passwords to constant printer pains.