The many ways your organisation can fail
Some of these are will kill your organisation. Others are zombie-states – living deaths where your organisation seems to be alive but may as well… Read More »The many ways your organisation can fail
Some of these are will kill your organisation. Others are zombie-states – living deaths where your organisation seems to be alive but may as well… Read More »The many ways your organisation can fail
How fast you can go depends in part upon the road. You need to ride differently through an alleyway – with sudden turns, open drains,… Read More »The speed of the road
The five– make that the twelve things you need to build an effective organisation for change:
Great! Was it any good? What are you going to do to make your best get better? This might be about: Improving concrete skills Working… Read More »“I did my best.”
This is an interesting set of pieces of information about the kinds of institutions that last a really long time, and the strategies that allow… Read More »Resource: The Data of Long-lived Institutions from The Long Now Foundation
This post is part of the working draft of the DriverlessCrocodile Toolkit (read more here). I’d love comments, links to resources related to the theme,… Read More »The Toolkit – Part 1: Foundations (13) – blood and bone
The skill of debugging is to figure out what you really told your program to do instead of what you thought you told your program… Read More »Tim O’Reilly on debugging your organisation
I’m horrified to discover that I haven’t posted anything much focusing on Steve Blank’s work on Startups, customer discovery and iteration. His definition of a… Read More »Steve Blank: definition of a startup
Some types of work that leaders do: Foundational and Directional Work This is the vision and values stuff – identifying needs, thinking through the “why”… Read More »A balancing act for leaders (1)
If you ask most people who run a factory, or an organisation or a sports team, what they’re looking for is a taut, firm connection… Read More »Seth Godin on slack in systems