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Don't plan, execute! Paton was right. Victory depends on execution, not plans. Flexibility and leadership win wars, not acronyms.


In Chapter 12 of the late Stephen Ambrose's book The Victors he tells how the Allies had the chance to encircle en·cir·cle  
tr.v. en·cir·cled, en·cir·cling, en·cir·cles
1. To form a circle around; surround. See Synonyms at surround.

2. To move or go around completely; make a circuit of.
 the German Army and crush it in France before racing across the Rhine River Rhine River
 German Rhein

River, western Europe. Rising in the Swiss Alps, it flows north and west through western Germany to drain through the delta region of The Netherlands into the North Sea. It is 820 mi (1,319 km) long and navigable for 540 mi (870 km).
 to Berlin. But there was no implementation of General Patron's boldly audacious strategy. The naysayers said if wouldn't work, and never tried to make it a success. Instead they prevailed upon Ike to follow the smaller, safer plan they had hatched prior to the battle.

Britain's General Montgomery General Montgomery may refer to either of the following:
  • Bernard Montgomery, a British general and later field marshal, during World War II.
  • Richard Montgomery, an Irish-American soldier who served as a major general in the Continental Army during the American
 argued the safe plan would waste men and materiel ma·te·ri·el or ma·té·ri·el  
n.
The equipment, apparatus, and supplies of a military force or other organization. See Synonyms at equipment.
. Sure, there was a chance Patron's Third Army would overrun 1. overrun - A frequent consequence of data arriving faster than it can be consumed, especially in serial line communications. For example, at 9600 baud there is almost exactly one character per millisecond, so if a silo can hold only two characters and the machine takes  its supply lines, or its flanks would be exposed, but the alternative--driving through Brittany in order to seize the ports of Brest and St.-Malo--was sheer lunacy lunacy: see insanity.  as Patron's drive would eliminate the need t capture them--and win the war much earlier. Plus, he asked, wasn't that their job, to use the capital placed at their disposal in the most effective, efficient way? In a letter to Eisenhower in 1926 Patton wrote: "Victory in the next war will depend in EXECUTION not PLANS." But an older, more political Eisenhower jettisoned the knockout punch in favor of a right hook designed fo knock the Germans off balance. "But," says Ambrose succinctly suc·cinct  
adj. suc·cinct·er, suc·cinct·est
1. Characterized by clear, precise expression in few words; concise and terse: a succinct reply; a succinct style.

2.
, "the enemy already was staggering. He should have been knocked out." The lack of flexibility extended the war. It may kill domestic OEMs.

Competing with Asian and European automakers by building American versions of what the opposition already offers is lunacy. I doubt George S. Patton “George Patton” redirects here. For the 19th century Scottish jurist and politician, see George Patton, Lord Glenalmond.

George Smith Patton Jr. GCB, KBE (November 11, 1885 – December 21, 1945) was a leading U.S.
, were he put in charge of an American automaker, would be discussing the need for craftsmanship, attention to detail, or how his hybrid would be as good, or better, than the competition's. He'd be looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 ways to outflank them.

He'd be marshalling his troops to do the impossible; taking the fight to the enemy, probing for weakness in ifs defenses, and breaking through. Some of his troops would be given the assignment of evaluating new technologies, and looking for better ways of doing things using current methods. From this, the regular army could draw production-ready technologies to help it keep costs low, value high, and them in the thick of the battle.

The Special Forces, on the other hand, wouldn't be constrained. A multi-front force, if would create both a mid- and long-range execution strategy. There would be multiple entries into each market utilizing different bases and common components in order to improve flexibility. Large cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs would share a single body-on-frame platform with rear- and all-wheel-drive, but be built on the same lines in smaller batches. Unibody vehicles would cover similar segments at different price points, and the smaller sizes. Sharing architectures and major component sets would make each financially viable, as would some minor cross-pollination. Some vehicles would compete with the market leaders, while numerous alternatives attacked nearby demographic pockets, or took breakout positions. Exposure would be minimized, troop strength maximized.

A splinter SPLINTER - A PL/I interpreter with debugging features.

[Sammet 1969, p.600].
 force would investigate new technologies that radically reduce costs and obsolete current technologies. Promising ideas would be passed to development teams to create a number of on-the-shelf options. This would give future troops the knowledge base essential to execute a strategy instead of an outdated plan. Unfortunately, what passes for execution in this town amounts to checking boxes and creating acronyms for the latest "Master Plan."
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Title Annotation:Dudler
Author:Sawyer, Christopher A.
Publication:Automotive Design & Production
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 1, 2003
Words:563
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