What you see depends on your point of view.

Our point of view determines what we see and how we perceive things – literally and figuratively.

𝗘ð—ķð—ŧ ð—Ŋð—ē𝘄𝘂𝘀𝘀𝘁ð—ēð—ŋ 𝗊ð—ē𝗰ð—ĩ𝘀ð—ēð—đ ð—ąð—ēð—ŋ ð—Ģð—ēð—ŋð˜€ð—―ð—ēð—ļ𝘁ð—ķ𝘃ð—ē ð—ĩð—ķð—đð—ģ𝘁 ð—ĩð—ŪĖˆð˜‚ð—ģð—ķð—ī, ð—Ģð—ŋ𝗞ð—Ŋð—đð—ē𝗚ð—ē ð—žð—ąð—ēð—ŋ 𝗠ð—ķ𝘀𝘀𝘃ð—ēð—ŋ𝘀𝘁ð—Ūˈð—ŧð—ąð—ŧð—ķ𝘀𝘀ð—ē 𝘇𝘂 ð—ēð—ŋð—ļð—ēð—ŧð—ŧð—ēð—ŧ 𝘂ð—ŧð—ą ð—Ū𝘂ð—ģ𝘇𝘂ð—đð—žĖˆð˜€ð—ēð—ŧ.

We are often so stuck in our own “bubble” that we find it difficult to see the other person’s world. This applies to pretty much all areas of life… but also for IT projects and the concerns of the people involved in them.

Try moving to a different seat in the meeting room every time for a week. It’s really exciting how that alone changes your perception 🙂