“Simple Problem-Solving Work” – Column now掲載 on To allied ECONOMY ONLINE
Good morning, this is Matsushita.
Today, I will introduce a simple problem-solving method that I have been practicing for 15 years.
First, please prepare the notebook or planner you use for studying and checking investments.
Next, for your current investments, think about the most pressing issue or problem you want to solve,
and write it in that notebook.
At this time, what you should be careful about is to write only one issue that you want to resolve the most.
After you finish writing it,
from then on, while continually checking that issue every day,
please proceed with it.
Until that issue is resolved,
continue to work on it.
If you do so, the investment issues
will gradually be resolved.
In fact, for the past 15 years,
I have solved issues in this way.
When I first started doing this,
I wasn't intentionally doing it,
and it took quite a long time to resolve the issues.
I still clearly remember,
the issue I faced back then was,
“I buy late, I want to buy at a lower price
near the bottom price.”
Looking back now, of course,
at that time I had only learned trend following,
and naturally the timing for trend-following buying
was after a certain period of increase has formed.
For someone who wanted to buy closer to a turning point,
I needed contrarian-type theories.
So I continued to work on this issue,
and I had a fateful encounter with the “Meriman cycle theory.”
This problem-solving method
is a practical method that I have practiced for 15 years.
I believe it will be helpful to you as well, so please try it.
Our brains, when properly recognizing a problem,
have the power to lead us to a solution.