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In “The Goal”, the factory runs on dependent events. A widget must first have one thing done to it, and then another thing done to it, and then it’s finished and it can be shipped. Ta-da, we’ve added value to the world and achieved “The Goal”, right?
Let’s take one step back. Widen the view. For the factory to even exist, a few things must be true.
Somebody must know about the widget that the factory produces.
Somebody must perceive the value of the widget.
Somebody must be willing to buy (or trade, or receive) it at the price the factory is selling it at.
These are, in fact, dependent events. And every business has them. Sometimes there’s even departments dedicated to these three steps! It’s called marketing. Imagine having a factory that produces a widget, but you cannot tell anyone about the part. You cannot even distribute the widget for free (read: LTV, word of mouth, referrals). 1 reply
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Imagine you, an aspiring young botanist, scientist, whatever, have developed the cure to world hunger. It’s a type of plant that doesn’t require water, nutrients, or dirt. You just set it on the ground and bang, infinite food. It’s quite remarkable, really.
Now imagine you’re locked in a cave, and can never tell anyone about what you’ve made. Does it matter? Will the immense value of what you created ever get transferred to the people who need it? Is there even any actual value being created? Perhaps personally you feel proud of the thing you’ve created, that’s of course not unimportant. But certainly not practically.
Nobody will ever eat the food it produces, nobody will benefit from this discovery. It will not save a single life. You will win no awards and achieve no accolades. 0 reply
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