Mindset techniques for visualising success. More techniques in the link in my bio or click on the image.
#morningvibes #morningmotivation
#mindset #mindsetmatters #mindsetiseverything #subconsciousmind #successtips #entrepreneur #visualise
Mindset techniques for visualising success. More techniques in the link in my bio or click on the image.
#morningvibes #morningmotivation
#mindset #mindsetmatters #mindsetiseverything #subconsciousmind #successtips #entrepreneur #visualise
This is cute and a useful demonstration: 100 ways to #visualise a simple #data set of three observations for each of two years.
I* have invented** an #infosec visualisation for any #CISO to use while workshopping on Post-Its with management - the "subm3rge surface"*** metric.
All too often when prioritising what's on the Post-Its, be it #BCP, #DR, or just plain operations steps, (senior) managers will want to hedge, like "It depends on situation" or "There's some priority overlap between these two areas". This makes the whiteboard exercise messy, and designing efficient #ISMS or #risk #governance harder, since it creates dependencies and coordination costs that are hard to #visualise in the #workshop.
The "subm3rge surface" metric helps you visualise the increased costs to management, in one simple step: When placing the Post-Its on the whiteboard, mind your priority overlap vertical. And when presenting the total cost factor of #infosec work, present the *outer envelope* size of all dependent Post-Its. It's that simple.
In a "clean" vertical of priority, it's cheap/easy, as we know. And even in the horrifying "flat" priority, it's at least cheap to implement... But the interlocked unclean priority ladder, that's the expensive one.
The "subm3rge surface" metric helps you show that!
*/**(yes this is a blatant attempt at getting some replyperson to show me the prior art :)
***(catchy, eh? :)
I recently listened to an episode of #RutherfordAndFry and discovered that 97% of people actually #visualise things in their head.
Well... 97% of my life is now friends and family saying 'so what happens when you think of X' and refusing to believe me when I say 'nothing'
Are there really 100 different ways to #visualise even a *very* small dataset?
As the intro so eloquently says:
“Every time we turn a set of data into a visual depiction, hundreds of design choices have to be made to make the data tell the best story possible”….
I really enjoyed scanning this. It’s not done in #rstats but it’s the sort of thing that is probably of interest to the community.