A frog a day…
Killing “big frogs” (sorry Kermit) has become a shorthand among a group of friends of mine for getting important done. I trace it back to… Read More »A frog a day…
Killing “big frogs” (sorry Kermit) has become a shorthand among a group of friends of mine for getting important done. I trace it back to… Read More »A frog a day…
This post is another go at mission statements – mixing Peter Drucker’s description of a mission statement as “a concise statement of purpose” (it should… Read More »The Toolkit – Part 1: Foundations (8) – a shorter mission statement
In this post I explained the difference between vision and mission statements like this: If a vision statement is a statement about ends (the world… Read More »The Toolkit – Part 1: Foundations (7) – mission statements revisited
It means all kinds of things if the client or user of a non-profit organisation’s services pays. The organisation will be focused on the client,… Read More »Who pays? (client / user edition)
“Who pays?” is an important question for all sorts of reasons. In the world of non-profits, donors often pay. This can mean: That the charity… Read More »Who pays? (Donor edition)
Can you think about systems? Can you think about how broad-scale systems interactions occur and what the implications are? … In order to make that… Read More »Ben Horowitz on leadership and management
This is from Ben Horowitz in a fantastic interview on building a successful culture in your organisation. Highly recommend. If you make decisions that everybody… Read More »Ben Horowitz on leadership and making unpopular decisions
Of course it’s a good idea to strike while the iron is hot. If striking iron is what you do and you find some hot… Read More »While the iron is hot
“Definitely, once a week,” is easier than “sometimes,” and “daily” is easier than once a week. A daily ritual keeps something front-of-mind, makes it almost… Read More »Easier than sometimes
“Always” and “never” are easier than “maybe”. “Maybe” requires a decision, introduces ambiguity. Most of our decisions start as “maybes” (hence the need for a… Read More »Easier than maybe