Posted on 05 June 2008
Why has teamworking changed from being simply one way to organize things into something supposedly valuable in itself? There’s nothing wrong with working in a team if that’s the best way to do things. What makes me wonder is the tendency for organizations to assume it’s the only way. I suspect this is another case of the emergence of a management myth: taking something that suits those who wish to control people and dressing it up as a kind of heroic virtue.
Tags: Leadership, Management myths
Posted on 29 May 2008
Spending time reflecting endlessly on what might have been, but wasn’t — or what you could have done, but didn’t — is a pointless and emotionally corrosive exercise. Going over the hurts of the past in your mind can make you suspicious and defensive in a vain attempt to prevent them reoccurring. The only sensible way forward is to let go of the past completely.
Tags: Management myths, Quality of life, Trust
Posted on 14 May 2008
What if individuals and organizations are responding to the pressures of today’s business climate by dealing with the wrong issue — trying to manage and extend time, when what they need to be doing is managing peoples’ energy levels? That’s the argument of a paper in Harvard Business Review. But the well-intentioned actions offered as answers miss the fact that both overwork and the long-hours culture are deeply embedded in the systems that organizations and top executives live by.
Tags: Corporate culture, Self-preservation, Stress, Stress-busters
Posted on 07 May 2008
The media have invaded the boardroom and brought with them many of the characteristics of melodrama: the continual sense of crisis, the stereotyped behaviors, the tendency to hype and overstatement, and the tricks that turn illusions into reality. It’s time we got back to reality, especially as managers and leaders. In stories, you can write the ending to the script in the way that you want it to turn out. In real life, the Seventh Cavalry may well not come over the hill in the nick of time to save you from being scalped.
Tags: Better Management, Corporate culture, Success
Posted on 29 April 2008
The attitude people have to their work can transform an economy. If work is nothing but a ‘four-letter word’ and a way of spending time you would much rather avoid, don’t look for any increase in productivity or creativity: the only things that drive any economy forward over the longer term. What we need is the kind of stimulus that will get people more engaged in making a better, more enjoyable, more civilized life for themselves and everyone else.
Tags: Better Management, Change, Corporate culture
Posted on 24 April 2008
Using numerical analysis as almost the sole guide to management action is tempting, especially in times when everyone is under pressure to “perform” against numerical targets. But relying on numbers is very risky, especially when business success depends more on people’s perceptions and responses than moving abstract figures around on a spreadsheet. Whatever the numbers say, people and their feelings nearly always have the final word.
Tags: Better Management, Hamburger Management, Seeing clearly
Posted on 15 April 2008
There’s good evidence that much leadership behavior borders on the psychopathic, but is this simply a response to organizational cultures that are themselves suffering from a fundamental sickness?
We’ve probably all seen articles that point to the close similarities between the symptoms listed as evidence for a diagnosis of psychopathic illness and typical behaviors of many [...]
Tags: Hamburger Management
Posted on 11 April 2008
Today’s obsession with quantifiable objectives is more about office politics than performance
I was working for a well-known European government a couple of decades ago, in the days when quantifiable objectives for performance measurement were new and exciting — at least if you were excited by quantifiable measures of performance objectives. We had an office in [...]
Tags: Trust
Posted on 03 April 2008
If we can learn from it, we can establish management approaches that will do better
Photo of Hurricane Frances taken by Astronaut Mike Fincke aboard the International Space Station as he flew 230 statute miles above the storm at about 9 a.m. CDT Friday, Aug. 27, 2004. (NASA)
Our current management system is broken.
It’s based [...]
Tags: Civilized work
Posted on 01 April 2008
Conversation is becoming a lost art, replaced by endless one-way talk and organized “spin”
This is a revised and expanded version of a post I wrote back in 2005. If anything, the situation I describe seems to have become worse since then, so I believe that it is well worth repeating.
“To converse” means to share [...]
Tags: Authenticity, Civilized work