Strategy lurks in the deep places of our imagination
Organisations develop elaborate processes to control imagination, socialise it and constrain it. They have a talent for ‘grinding out diversity’. Consciously or unconsciously, the organisational systems and processes relentlessly ensure nothing changes.
Oh, so you’re an idealist!
In a transformation, we must never lose sight of the possibility that our actions today will be the ‘ripples of hope’ that lead to better outcomes. Otherwise, why bother? To Hope is a reasonable response to an impractical aspiration.
The art of the impossible
The art of the possible comes alive in planning, whereas strategy is uncompromising in its demand for the impossible.
It takes a village to beat COVID-19
In uncertainty, trust, relationships, and community are front of mind.
Facing an uncomfortable truth
Imagine living in your car and having to prepare for a job interview.
Sans domicile: what does it mean to be without a home?
A home can be described as safety, security, and stability. But a home is also much more than that.
Time to Rethink Leadership: a Head, Hand and Heart Approach
Leadership, what it is, how it is done, and its value are deeply embedded in our history and culture. Leadership is a social relationship grounded in historical knowledge. It is developed and refined through judgement and interpretation.
A pragmatic approach
Does our unhealthy desire to be seen as pragmatic, task-focused, can-do, action-oriented, heroic leaders grind out the diversity of thought in our organisations? Does it grind out possibility and opportunity?
Leaders of organisational change and reform need to be 'Pitchmen'
The leaders of organisational change and reform must be Pitchmen. They must constantly persuade the workforce to engage intellectually with the idea of change, but most importantly, they seek a voluntary commitment to change behaviour.
Welcome to the New Machine - Part II
Management does not have a deep sense of time or history, so we will continue to re-learn age-old behaviour, work, and organisation lessons as we build the new machine. However, we can be sure that people will always be the critical and essential element of work and organisation.
Welcome to the New Machine - Part I
The solution to our sense of personal dislocation is not to focus on the fracturing of our work experience but rather on the philosophy and principles that have always been important to our work and organisation.
Welcome to the Machine
We induct new starters into the mystic rites of our workplaces. We treat them as lost innocents requiring special knowledge of processes and relationships to fill a place in the machinery of work.
The Future’s Uncertain
The word disruption is losing all meaning through indiscriminate overuse. This is particularly true for the phrase ‘digital disruption’. It is also becoming true for the phrase ‘future of work’, which maps out disruptive forces impacting the workforce and organisation.
The Future of Work: It’s a Saucerful of Secrets
The future of work is a mystery, not a puzzle. Not only don’t we have enough information about the future of work, but we may not even have the tools to help us frame the problem correctly.
Pigs on the Wing
The force that drives human behaviour and progress is imagination. Rationality tests and validates.
Mining for the truth and delusion of the future of work...
A lot is being written about the future of work. Not a lot of it is interesting or challenging. It should be, but it’s not.
High Hopes
As with all new technology, the underlying concern is: do we know what we are losing?
Two views on specialisation
Specialisation is impossible, or specialisation is necessary, which is it?
The Thin Ice of Modern Life
We live in democratised version of the tall poppy syndrome? A world in which the moody mob rules.