Trust has always come up for me in knowledge management conversations, but as this blog from Social in silico post discusses, it is really the center of being able to work together successfully.
Trust has always come up for me in knowledge management conversations, but as this blog from Social in silico post discusses, it is really the center of being able to work together successfully.
"Leadership and Self-Deception: Getting Out of the Box" by The Arbinger Institute was a good and challenging read. I found it engaging with connections to ideas from Theory of Constraints that I have been exploring and using in my work. I also finished the book on Yom Kippur - a day of reflections - so I was thinking about my own assumptions around how I operate in the world.
When I don't take control of those requests, I can become slave to every interruption (or request every request that comes through on my calendar). Poppy Harlow (CNN anchor) had a great piece in yesterday's USA Today on "Finding Happiness in 'No'," where she described her journey in learning how to set limits.
By now, most people who read this know that multitasking causes a lot of problems in organizations. It creates delays, lowers quality, and creates more and more tension in an organization.A recent HBR Ideacast with Mark Mortensen described a variant that I have talked about but had never named: "multiteaming" - being assigned to multiple (different) projects.
The second day of Building on Success 2017 conference was also loaded with great hallway conversations and interesting presentations
At the Building on Success 2017 conference, Alex Knight spoke on fixing the healthcare system through the Theory of Constraints lens, mostly as described in his book Pride and Joy (my review), which tells the semi-fictional story of a significant turnaround at a hospital in the UK.
Gene Kim gave a great plenary at the Building on Success 2017 conference that described how TOC and related thinking can create truly breakthrough operations for technology.
Some highlights from the first day at Building on Success 2017. Focus, Full Kit and more.
"This stuff works!" from Retired Lt. General Andrew Busch in summarizing his 12 years in leadership positions and using Theory of Constraints to create significant improvements in his work. His summary included many things that Kris Cox listed in her 7 Essentials
Kris Cox, the Executive Director of Utah Governor’s Office of Management and Budget, gave one of the opening keynotes to the Building on Success 2017 conference. Hers was another great talk on what she sees as the 7 Essentials for Breakthrough Results in any type of organization.
Another good, fast read of a "standby" book on Theory of Constraints, technology sales and thinking about real business problems. One of the most lasting elements from this book is a way to think about technology in light of improving an organization: the questions for technology.
Every time we switch attention, it causes us to burn mental energy. And that energy lost ends up costing us: I usually focus on the fact that everything takes longer when my focus shifts. But we also lose creativity, sleep, energy... and more.
Major Account Sales Strategy by Neil Rackham is a follow-on to his classic SPIN Selling, taking that approach and applying to bigger projects that require more and more effort to close the sale. It fits a lot with how I have been seeing the world lately.
The last leg of the supply chain in many systems is the retail store, where the ultimate pull happens: a customer buys the product. Theory of Constraints applied in retail seeks to ensure the right product at the right place at the right time, so that the retailer can continue to stay in business.
It seems so easy to start with the tools before we think about why and what we are doing. The Agile Manifesto for Software Development provides a suggestion: People and Interactions over Processes and Tools.
A quick post about flow and the challenge of bringing this idea into organizations - it challenges deeply-held beliefs.
I finished "Stretch: Unlock the Power of Less - and Achieve Than You Ever Imagined" by Scott Sonenshein a few weeks ago, and have had the ideas rolling around in my head since then. I really like the overall premise of the book: lean towards Stretching instead of Chasing. I found that it nicely connects to the ideas of Theory of Constraints and process improvement in general.
A client sent a link to Tom Wujec's TED Scotland 2013 talk, Got a Wicked Problem? First, tell me how you make toast. His idea is to use drawing and visualization to help people bring clarity to their problems. And I pick up on the idea of allowing ourselves to iterate around the visualization as being important to understanding the deeper system.
I came across "Guest Blog: Finding Science and Success with Lean Principles in R&D" by Norbert Majerus of Goodyear on the Factory Physics website, and it describes the Factory Physics ideas as applied in new product development, and I thought it was a pretty good summary. This is also a lot of what we do with Theory of Constraints concepts applied in product development (and project management) arenas too.