Monday, March 31, 2014

Make the Jump, As a Child Would

Technology forces us to evaluate how we conduct business.  How that advancement takes place depends mostly on our approach to it and what risks we are willing to take.  When making the decision to embrace BIM, it needs to be with all attention moving forward and no thoughts of going back.  Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises1 gives a great illustration of how failure can result when holding onto something out of the fear of failure.  The prison pit provides a clear view of freedom to the sky.  The only way out is to climb the walls and make a far reaching jump near the top.  Before Bruce was sent down, there had only been one successful attempt at the jump by a child.  Every man that attempted had failed and some even died.
  
A lot of complaints about Revit tend to be about the aesthetic and how Revit drawings don’t look like AutoCAD drawings.  Why should they? Why approach a new design platform with the standards from an old platform still in use?  Revit is not a drafting tool, but a design tool.  Utilizing drafters to document 3D content in Revit is missing the point of BIM in Revit.  Drafters may just be reproducing hand-drawn markups with no knowledge of the design.  At a minimum, designers with an understanding of the systems should be modeling the work.  Components should be set to provide engineering feedback that aid in layouts and sizing.  


We tend to fall back on things that we know.  When tasked with learning something new, we may only reach as far as we can while still holding onto where we are.  Bruce Wayne made several attempts at the jump and failed to get within grasp of the other ledge.  He would fall and be caught by the safety rope and lowered to safety.  He knew that he would try and if he failed, he could go back down to what he knew, even if he didn’t want to be there.  It was the revelation that the child, who successfully made the jump, did so without the rope that changed him.  Bruce Wayne had to let go of anything holding him back to make the jump, including his safety line.  He had to put all his effort into getting across the gap, because failure this time would cost him everything.



In a recent discussion, the topic was brought up about new software.  A question was asked, ‘How do you get people to use the new software and stop using the old?”  The answer, quite simply, was to remove the old software from the computer and force the use of the new technology.  This doesn’t mean get rid of AutoCAD, but to stop the use of AutoCAD as a fallback when things don’t work in Revit.  Focus on the task and remove all clouded thought that complicates the process of rolling out new techniques.  Focus on the big picture of a project and not how to do the old method in the new software.  With everything on the line, Bruce made the jump and succeeded in escaping the pit.


My first attempt at Revit was not easy, but failure was not an option.  We started with nothing, but finished with issued plans and a growing sense of accomplishment.  The goal has always been to improve capabilities in Revit, not how to manage Revit as part of an old system of AutoCAD.  Make the jump as the child did without the rope.  Once that jump has been made, you might understand the look of success and relief on Bruce’s face.


-Craig

1 The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Christopher Nolan, Christian Bale

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