Was watching Road To Glory for British Cycling and Team Sky and their coach Dave Brailsford came up with this theory of marginal gains…That if you add just 1% overall improvement in all features the output is greater than the sum total, and this approach made them win the TDF in 3 years instead of the projected 5 years and the next Olympics too. I really want to go and try breakdown EVERYTHING we do at work, and see the marginal improvements that can be made and would ask you to do the same in your environment. I’m really stoked about it and probably the first principle that I want to try and see through…I’m not even sure they teach it in business school.
#CheckiManenoLessons @Mkufuu @Meria Mata
Definitely a must try, think it works
well, maybe you are stoked, but do i know what you have…
sande for the correction
There are a lot of principles in cycling that you can apply in life.
For example following the wheel…One can save up to 60% energy by following a group of cyclists ahead of them
In life, if you chose your mentors and friends very well, you can save more than 70% of time to achieve anything.
Follow the wheel like Cavendish does on other sprinters and you can save energy for the final sprint.
I LOVE CYCLING.
Cavendish has quit the tour to concentrate on Rio.
He should have quit earlier but he is such a fighter having stayed till now…I wish him well in Rio.
Ameona milima akaona ajikate…still like that principle of gradual improvement in everything[ATTACH=full]49035[/ATTACH]