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Unfolding the Napkin by Dan Roam
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Unfolding the Napkin

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Unfolding the Napkin by Dan Roam
Paperback $25.00
Dec 29, 2009 | ISBN 9781591843191

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    Dec 29, 2009 | ISBN 9781591843191

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  • Dec 29, 2009 | ISBN 9781101163146

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Praise

“In 2008, Roam’s The Back of the Napkin soaked up some book-of-the-year love from The Financial Times, Businessweek and Amazon.com. Roam’s point was that problems can be better solved by drawing simple pictures, regardless of artistic ability. It’s easier to see solutions visually, and it’s also the revealing process of physically diagramming a problem, the argument goes.

To discover truly breakthrough ideas, intuitively develop those ideas and share those ideas effectively with others, we need pictures,” Roam writes.

Since then, the management consultant and his Sharpies have conducted workshops at an impressive list of organizations, including Boeing, Pfizer, Google, Microsoft, Wal-mart and the U.S. Senate. Now, with Unfolding the Napkin, Roam squeezed his four-day workshop into a workbook so everyone can follow along.

It’s a simple concept, but when Roam arrives at a solution for last year’s economic crisis by drawing intersecting circles representing financial services, the auto industry and declining energy supplies, it’s clear that Napkin is nothing to sneeze on.
USA Today, Jan. 4, 2010

Whoever draws the best picture of a problem is the most likely to solve it.

Dan Roam offers a simple explanation about how to draw a problem/solution picture.

Draw a circle in the upper left corner of a sheet of paper and label it me. Draw a cloud-shaped circle in the lower left; label it my problem. Draw the shape of a closed Swiss army knife on the center of the page. Add and label “blades” (what you see, what to look for, what if…, how, when, where, why, how much, etc.) that deal with me and my problem. Those blades help you think of others that will help identify the problem, alternatives and solution.

What Roam drew on one page took me 90 words to describe, by the way.
The Dallas Morning News, Dec. 26, 2009

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