First off, what a fantastic organization -> I'm not going to do my self-improvement sales pitch right now, but it's coming.
In Toastmasters, members prepare and give speeches in order to further our public speaking skills. A member of the audience is assigned to critique the speech on a number of points, one of them being grammar.After one of my speeches, the person assigned to giving me feedback mentioned that I had used the word "prethink". Their point was that this was in fact not a word and I should find another way to say what I meant. Let me dispute this.
I believe that "prethink" is a word with a meaning that is applicable and critical to numerous aspects of our lives. Prethink means to plan in response to potential ad-hoc conversations or scenarios. An example would be: "I have a call with so-and-so in 10 minutes. How should I respond if they ask me about that issue they were concerned with?".
You may argue that "Plan" is the word for this, but I see this as a much more fluid and on-the-fly skill. It's about building a short-term strategy for an important interaction. "Planning" is good, but I want to use it for more brick&mortar style decisions. Just like saying "cloud" instead of "time-sharing", prethink conveys a different energy than plan.
What do you think?
Is this a term that should make it into every-day use?
~Brian
1 comment:
How about pro-activate? ;-)
What impresses me is the proactive approach you take to envision what's coming and prepare in advance. This reflects your proactive personality, which is, in my opinion, the sign of a true leader.
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