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An important sounding way of saying “problem”. | {{def|Problem statement|/ˈprɒbləm ˈsteɪtm(ə)nt/|n|}}An important sounding way of saying “problem”. [[Problem solving|Solving problems]] is, more or less, the single valuable activity that a [[legal eagle]] can participate in (other than being in the inhouse rock band, the [[Legal Council]], at the office Christmas party). Curiously, most legal eagles and, in this commentator’s experience, squarely ''no'' [[change manager]] that has ever grace the face of the Earth, have taken the trouble to even ask the question “what is the problem?”, let alone set about answering it. | ||
{{ | Some things that are ''not'' the answer to the problem: | ||
*More [[policy]] | |||
*A [[risk taxonomy]] | |||
*[[Outsourcing]] | |||
*[[Internal audit]] or [[human resources]]. (any question to which the answer is “[[internal audit]]” or “[[human resources]]” is, by rebuttable presumption, a stupid one. | |||
{{sa}} | |||
*[[Problem solving]] |
Latest revision as of 12:04, 12 December 2020
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Problem statement /ˈprɒbləm ˈsteɪtm(ə)nt/ (n.)
An important sounding way of saying “problem”. Solving problems is, more or less, the single valuable activity that a legal eagle can participate in (other than being in the inhouse rock band, the Legal Council, at the office Christmas party). Curiously, most legal eagles and, in this commentator’s experience, squarely no change manager that has ever grace the face of the Earth, have taken the trouble to even ask the question “what is the problem?”, let alone set about answering it.
Some things that are not the answer to the problem:
- More policy
- A risk taxonomy
- Outsourcing
- Internal audit or human resources. (any question to which the answer is “internal audit” or “human resources” is, by rebuttable presumption, a stupid one.