Problem-Solving Strategies
A problem is any question, matter, or opportunity involving doubt, uncertainty, or difficulty. A strategy is a plan, method, or series of maneuvers or stratagems for obtaining a specific goal or result. To solve is the act of engaging with a difficulty and pursuing a specific result.
There are four problem-solving strategies: absolve, resolve, solve, and dissolve.
Absolve (no thanx) is to ignore the problem or opportunity; to assume it will solve itself or go away. Ignoring it is not negative; doing nothing may be the best solution. Intentional inaction.
Resolve (good enuf) is the use of our previous experience or common sense; when we're looking for a good enough solution, not perfect. Resolution is when a solid B is more than sufficient rather than a perfect A+.
Solve (good as b4) is to completely solve or have the solution. Where perfect is or was defined. When we're looking for how it was before the problem or opportunity. Solving is restoring and/or achieving the accepted standard; a solution is A+.
Dissolve (better than b4) is to reframe the problem in a way that is no longer a problem; it is a dissolution or redesign that eliminates the problem. Requires perceiving the problem at a different magnitude of scale.