This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 8th, 2009 at 7:53 pm and is filed under unfiled. You can follow any comments to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment, or trackback from your own site.
This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 8th, 2009 at 7:53 pm and is filed under unfiled. You can follow any comments to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment, or trackback from your own site.
I’m working inside SME’s at the moment and its interesting how directly useful these ideas are, but also incredibly difficult to implement/action. In the concrete world of SME’s theres no room for deep thought or multiple iterations (meetings)to tease out or explore thinking models. Yet the unrealised or latent demand is there. I have found no tool that will, for example link scenario planning with cashflow forecasts to assess the impacts of ‘interventions’ or improvement investments. While we can easily capture the numbers all the contextual info (key assumptions) disappears the moment the white board is cleaned and the spreadsheet saved. In the big org theres time and resources to indulge the imperfect/imprecise processes. The SME is much less forgiving, the idea rapidly impacts – for better or worse…Noah Raford » A DJ is not a conductor: Different design skills for different levels of complexity
Thick value comes from innovations that have authenticity (they create genuine value for people)Behavioural Innovation « Innovation Strategy « Innovation Leadership Network
A DJ is not a conductor: Different design skills for different levels of complexityNoah Raford » A DJ is not a conductor: Different design skills for different levels of complexity
The irrelevance of winning percentage is nicely summed up by another legend named George (Soros): it doesn’t matter how often you are right or wrong - it only matters how much you make when you are right, versus how much you lose when you are wrong.Babe Ruth & Accuracy | TurtleTrader
Getting Buy-In For Abstract Ideas - John Sviokla - HarvardBusiness.org.
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What if you were given that choice? For real. What if it weren’t just the hyperbolic rhetoric that conflates corporate performance with life and death? Not the overblown exhortations of a rabid boss, or a slick motivational speaker, or a self-dramatizing CEO. We’re talking actual life or death now. Your own life or death. What if a well-informed, trusted authority figure said you had to make difficult and enduring changes in the way you think and act? If you didn’t, your time would end soon — a lot sooner than it had to. Could you change when change really mattered? When it mattered most?

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