The core problem of Management is stagnation of Collective Ability. Enough evidence has accumulated to deduce Collective Ability is raised by removing all barriers to the flow of Knowledge.
My Barrier ‘Absence of a means to exploit the latent collective ability for pursuing success’ emphasizes the crucial importance of teamwork for performance. We have understood the power of teams constituted by active individuals. Pioneers like Packard, Iverson, Welch, Walton and others have shown the extraordinary gain in productivity that can follow from a constructive collective of inspired individuals given the wherewithal to deliver. Their work identifying Freedom as the means for inspiration is defined in detail by the draft study "Freedom-Based Management" referred to in the excellent hack of Bill Nobles on "Overcoming the management hierarchical control mindset—the key to re-inventing management and resolving 20 moonshots".
While Freedom is a natural yearning of human minds, progressing it requires considerable drive, discipline and organization to overcome power equations, self-interest, insecurity, comfort zones and plain shortage of quality time and energy. The available means are extrinsically induced motivation supported by the dismantling of Command and Control. Experience has shown that an imposed change unravels, and tutored motivation is difficult to develop and sustain, though Bill Nobles is confident about the sustainability of Freedom as a motivating factor.
Sustainable means to practice the guiding philosophy of 'Freedom' have yet to be created. The existing means are all dependent upon the energy of personnel for their drive and organization. Today the argument for Freedom rests on its power to initiate self-organization, self-drive and self-motivation.
Intrinsic empowerment requires not only grant to the individual of rights and levers for action but also compelling means to liberate her/his time and energy, induce in her/him the volition to express herself/himself, assure voluntary participation in the goals of the organization and drive the person's membership of communities for high quality collective work and thinking. Free-flow of Knowledge is associated with Trust & Teamwork and formation of Collectives (see Hack: Achieving the ends of Knowledge with feedback). It is possible that the free flow of Knowledge will satisfy all requirements of empowerment, i.e., Freedom translates to free-flow. Free-flow can spread this Freedom only if its means is easy to roll out
Command and Control is the antithesis of Freedom and hence a Knowledge Collective. Such collectives function best when they are voluntary. We have likely inherited Command and Control thinking from the times of Niccolo Machiavelli, the 16th century Italian philosopher/writer considered the main architect of political science as practiced in the 20th century. After deep study of the exercise of power and events he opined (Wikipedia):
It is possible that the principle of Command and Control built into Machiavelli’s thinking was believed by him to be a necessary evil, required by power equations, for success during uncertain times. He in fact cautioned against its overuse during times of peace. He believed that the end justified the means in times of instability and uncertainty, and even counseled lying to the people to get them to fight against a common foe. The US Government of 2001-2004 practiced this thinking in its war on Iraq but earned the disapproval of its citizens when the truth emerged.
Perhaps the Iraq war has conclusively established that enhanced flow of Knowledge has changed the practice of power. Besides, the war also showed that Command and Control and the related use of Force are a weakness of governing regimes: Communist regimes, notorious for their repression of free-flow of Knowledge, have a rather poor record for Command and Control. Command and Control may only be checkmated by an infrastructure that assures a strong flow of Knowledge.
3M is an example of the power of free-flow to drive innovations and success. Tom Peters in his book ‘In Search of Excellence’ has described their prevalent culture of engaging in intense debate in rooms meant for the purpose. His carry away impression was of an environment with multiple ongoing conversations. The culture for free-flow at 3M is a product of years of development. The culture is unique in that many organizations have sought to reproduce it but failed.
Dialogue is a Greek word that stands for flow of meaning (dia: through, and logos: word or meaning) around and through participants. It effects the free-flow of knowledge. The colonial administration demonstrates the power of Dialogue to efficiently and effectively run an administration. Drucker has recorded in his 1988 paper (3) that the use of Dialogue enabled just 1000 administrators provide effective governance which thousands of Mandarins with their elaborate hierarchies could not achieve in neighboring China. The system overcame distribution of administrators over remote regions inaccessible by road, rail and telegraph, and supported a reporting (mentoring) span of 100 administrators to 1 principal! The colonial system, though highly successful in its heyday, is now in decay.
The failure of Collaboration:
The distinction between Knowledge sharing and Knowledge free-flow is important for the formation and ability of Collectives. Both are performed in their own time. However, in Sharing personnel decide what is worth sharing and whether they would like to update content to a common repository. It may not distinguish between content and opinions on the content. An opinion may or may not be updated. Further, the User decides the context. This permits different Users to categorize the same content per different categories. In free-flow, the worker is expected to express an opinion while progressing the work on a specific content categorized by the System. The opinion is captured with context in a natural way as in a Discussion Board attached to news stories on the Web. Everybody in the loop has a right to respond to the opinion/insight expressed by a member. The response can be made at convenience, i.e., does not require same time presence. Conversations are open till the event or issue of which it is a part is formally closed. The categorization enables access to the flow in context. Consequently, Sharing as a concept suffers from several drawbacks that do not arise with free-flow. The major ones are:
The absence of a concept to drive free-flow:
The importance of Dialogue for Free-flow of Knowledge:
There are two types of conversations - Dialogue and Discussion.
There is a consensus among Behaviorists, System theorists and philosophers that Dialogue delivers free-flow of Knowledge and that Discussion does not. IT tools exist for Discussion. Conventional IT holds that means to organize Dialogue are inconceivable.
The delivery of Dialogue.
Conversations take place in interactions. My Barrier: Neglect of the accumulated Management Wisdom presents my concept of the Knowledge Assembly Line to harness technology for capturing and taming interactions. The Assembly Line sets up coordination to create a pipeline for systematic flow of Knowledge.
The proven Blog/Comment Board format is available to convert the Knowledge assembled on each event into Dialogue. Comments on news stories to emerge the truth / form opinion have established their popularity on the Web. Blogs have already established themselves for generating thought:
In my use of the Discussion Board concept contributors do not go to a site. The context comes to them in a highly visible and accessible form. I have modified the Discussion Board Comment format to emphasize Facts and Assumptions and emerge a consensus of opinion on business events. The specific format and its effortless operation is explained in my hack: Compelling Energy for a quantum jump in organization performance with the same resources.
There are tested and well researched ways of superior thinking like the Six Thinking Hats or the methods promoted by MITA. However, common to these methods is the need for a platform to conduct meaningful conversations in a chaotic environment where the personnel are overloaded. Dialogue is not only a means for conversation but also fosters superior thinking. Its means will facilitate the delivery of scientific Knowledge on better thinking to raise the overall value add.
(1) Sun Tzu. (~500 BC). The art of war. http://www.chinapage.com/sunzi-e.html (Accessed July 01, 2010).
(2) Senge, P. M. (2006). The Fifth Discipline. NY: Currency Doubleday (First Published: 1990)
(3) Drucker Peter, F. (1988). ‘Coming of the new organization’. Harvard Business Review, January-February, 1988.
(4) Davenport, T. (March 21, 2007). Why Enterprise 2.0 Won't Transform Organizations. Harvard Business Online.
http://discussionleader.hbsp.com/davenport/2007/03/why_enterprise_20_wont_transfo.html (Accessed July 01, 2010).
(5) Provoost (January 28, 2010). The Structured vs. Unstructured Data Dilemma. Headshift.
http://www.headshift.com/blog/2010/01/the-structured-vs-unstructured.php (Accessed July 01, 2010).
Solution Overview Presentation at https://docs.google.com/present/edit?id=0AVka9xLnpQUNZGZ4cnF6cHpfNzU2Z2YyamRwZHM&hl=en&authkey=CJWu2r4H
My Breakthrough, developed over the last twenty years, solves major conceptual and technical problems to harness IT for organizing and driving the disciplines needed for superior Collective Ability. It delivers results regardless of chaos, change and volumes. My following Hacks and Barriers explain the problems and their resolution (the order gives the suggested order of reading though each is standalone):
The events and the times leading to my creation of compelling intelligent energy for driving Management Wisdom are described in my Story 'Combating disbelief and indifference in surfacing a basic innovation that harnesses technology to drive success'. I believe the story provides a valuable lesson for emerging basic innovations that hold the potential to transform society.
Raj,
We just talk and presume we are doing what we can. In fact, I think we have stopped reading because we can interact. The difference between Dialogue and Discussion made it clear to me that the way we interact we promote our ignorance and justify it: After all, have we not given a chance to the other person and interacted?
Your Dialogue approach, perhaps made up of small bursts of feedback, will serve to question ignorance and identify assumptions. The approach is needed for the busy executive of today to prevent ignorance from ruling the day.
Regards,
Dhiraj
Dear Raj Kumar,
Your comment in your new Hack at: http://www.managementexchange.com/hack/creating-common-language-unite-st... on the poor response to problems by MIX staff has touched a raw nerve. MIX is a great idea, well integrated with the software. But its conduct is depressing. Firstly, they have yet to revert to me on the problems I faced in registering about 45 days ago. Had I not changed computers I would have still been struggling to join! But even more deplorable is the way contributions are graded. People can downgrade a Sketch without submitting a Build or a Comment! This is a competition. Rivalry is inescapable. Grading without transparency and any responsibility makes it easy for Rivals to bypass merit and climb over the works ahead of them. I have seen your new hack perform like a yo-yo. This time the grading is visible. Does it mean even the MIX authorities are engaging in the cowardly act of blind evaluations of content?
Just yesterday McKinsey released a new article on the poor attention paid to interactions though they govern the conduct of Knowledge work (see https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Organization/Strategic_Organization/Bo...). Nobody has the slightest inkling of how to tame (your word) Knowledge interactions and this is at the root of Management problems and stagnation of productivity. Your work is the only one that not only understands the importance of interactions and the havoc their growth is causing but actually proceeds to leverage a powerful philosophy and CREATES an inexhaustible energy source to tame them. You have taken great pains to explain your Hack and how it will bring alive the accumulated Management Wisdom. I have already expressed my expectation that your work will release a force to advance the conduct of Management along the trail blazed by the likes of David Packard and Ken Iverson and others. Could MIX have desired anything more? In the face of so much ignorance I have decided to confine my contributions to your work.
I could be wrong in my assessment of your work but it depresses me the MIX staff are making no effort to understand your work, grading your Hacks without so much as commenting on them and throwing the field open to opportunism. I am going to update this comment to each of your seven contributions in protest against the prevailing ignorance and attitude and give top marks to those of your contributions I have not graded. They deserve the marks.
I must do something: The MIX staff are throwing away the beautifully crafted opportunity created by Gary Hamel to advance Management.
P. Singh
October 12, 2010 at 3:34amHello,
This free-flow can have meaning only if it is also available offline. Regret I do not remember the hack. Does your work make it possible?
Regards,
P.Singh