Here, in WYSIWYG Tales, you will find Tales about people who have used WYSIWYG Wizardry and how that has helped them.
Read about Sarah and how.
Take a moment and ask yourself if you would like to: - See and understand how things you do fit together - or not - See ways to solve your problems and avoid crises - See how you can improve coordination with colleagues and friends - Help others see beneficial things they can or should be doing - See how to organize your thoughts and activities - See things that are really important and focus attention on them Then, get into the book.
All you need are some simple, down-to-earth, practical visualization techniques to help you see, better understand, and improve what you do and the way you do it.
No magic is required.
A little bit of WYSIWYG wizardry can help you.
You may be skipping down your own yellow brick road, doing what you do, not fully seeing and understanding what you do and how you fit in all that.
You, your friends, and your co-workers may be like that also.
They would very much like to avoid all of those difficulties but they can\'t see how to do that.
They do well most of the time but they also have problems, make mistakes, and have crises.
And, like the seekers in the movie, they cannot always see clearly what they do.
Sometimes they work alone and sometimes they work with other people to provide services or complete projects.
They build things, they write things, and they change things.
The people I work with do many different types of things.
People call me the WYSIWYG Wizard because that\'s the kind of thing I do and want to tell you about.
All he did was help them see.
He just created situations in which their actions made it easy for them to visualize the fact that those traits had always been there.
There was no real magic in what he did.
The Wizard found ways to help them see those things.
In The Wizard of Oz movie, Dorothy and her companions had, within themselves, the traits they sought but could not see.
Here, in WYSIWYG Tales, you will find Tales about people who have used WYSIWYG Wizardry and how that has helped them