In two earlier posts (#1- A metaphor and #2 - The limits of rationality and either-or thinking), I speculated on the insights that negative-space drawing (as described in Betty Edwards's Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain) might offer in relation to organizational change and development. This third and final post draws out some of the implications for leading organizations and makes some links to the informal coalitions view of organizational dynamics.
Continue reading "The negative spaces of organizational dynamics #3 - Leadership implications" »
In Is a Balanced Scorecard Bad?, Jonathan Becher argues "... metrics by themselves are unlikely to increase the performance of an organization... metrics must be accompanied by objectives and initiatives." This echoes Peter Drucker's often repeated view that:
- controls are different from control; and, most importantly, that
- more controls do not necessarily lead to more control.
Becher makes the equally important point that use of the term "scorecard" inevitably places undue emphasis on measures (ie 'scores' and scorekeeping). As I've suggested elsewhere, organizational scorekeepers and commentators are too often seen as more important than the players!
Continue reading "Drucker on controls and control" »
This post builds on the earlier discussion entitled The negative spaces of organizational dynamics #1 – A metaphor. It similarly draws on the notion of the negative space within drawings, as introduced by Betty Edwards in her book Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain. In particular, it challenges the limits of rational, ‘left-brained’ thinking in organizational leadership and consultancy.
Continue reading "The negative spaces of organizational dynamics #2 - The limits of rationality and either-or thinking" »
In the post Are Your Strengths Under Your Control? (31 January, 2007) "Ed" makes some important points about how an individual's strengths can become weaknesses if these are carried to excess. He suggests, for example, that self-confidence (a strength) can become arrogance (a weakness) if taken to an extreme. This is an important - and often overlooked - dynamic in individual and organizational performance.
Continue reading "The peaks and valleys of strengths and weaknesses" »
During my years as an engineer and then manager, I experienced many attempts by HR and OD departments to introduce what they saw as the ultimate answer to the performance management ‘problem’. The systems that they put in place were invariably well crafted, in terms both of the procedural disciplines that they sought to instil and the quality of materials provided for line managers, to facilitate their central role in the process. Despite these valiant efforts, the impact on results – if any - was invariably short-lived.
Continue reading "Re-focusing performance management" »
Gareth Morgan is Distinguished Research Professor at the Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto. He is a writer and management consultant, who places particular emphasis on the use of metaphor and paradox to understand the dynamics of organizations and the challenges of change. I first saw Morgan in action at a full-day session of the Independent Change Management Forum in 1997, in which he explored various aspects of metaphor and paradox in relation to organizational change. This reinforced my attraction to the use of metaphor and analogy as language and thinking tools. His discussion of the paradoxical nature of organizations also re-ignited my interest in this important but under-explored and misunderstood aspect of organizational dynamics.
Continue reading "Key influence #5 - Gareth Morgan" »
The following paradoxes reflect some of the key lessons that have arisen from my experience of managing and participating in organizational change:
Continue reading "Paradoxes of change" »
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