- The better you listen, the better you play and the better the group sounds
- Everybody has a role
- Low hierarchy can work well
- Even solos take place within the context of the group
- By following a few simple rules, you can make great things happen
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
What small business teams can learn from jazz
Labels: business, creativity
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Toys of the times

I was amazed when I heard about this toy. Rather than using a toy metal detector to search for buried treasure, it's a way to educate kids about airport security. Now we just need knowledge worker toys for kids. There could be a toy kit for being a management consultant, investment banker, marketer... maybe not.
From their website: "This unique toy/teaching aid provides ample amounts of healthy fun along with education and awareness of the security measures that people face in real life."
http://lifesinventions.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=product.display&Product_ID=2385&CFID=17420493&CFTOKEN=53095688
Labels: culture
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
On training impact
I often see clients with corporate training plans that seemed based on the premise that employees have a right to training, just not the right to use what they learn. Most training courses follow a one-time course model that has no follow-up. In a typical training course that might last a couple of days, employees can be exposed to new ideas and methods, but hardly have the opportunity to practice what they have learned. Under these conditions, how much new knowledge do they retain?
Even more problematic are training courses delivered right in the employee’s office via distance learning. While many companies prefer these courses because they are less expensive, their design means that employees are more easily distracted and tempted and expected to check in on their regular work that they are missing.
One company that seems to have got training – at least company-wide training – right is GE. For example, GE’s Six Sigma program has employees attend four weeks of training in statistics, processes and quality control and then requires employees to use what they have learned while working on or leading Six Sigma projects. Top management, many of themselves former Six Sigma “Black Belts”, supports the training.
I’m not making a case for implementing Six Sigma, but the integrated approach that GE takes seems to lead to more learning and higher payoff.
While it may not be practical to do the same with shorter, more specific courses that only apply to a small number of employees, companies can do a few simple things to increase their return on training investment.
- enforce a minimum amount of training per employee annually (dollar amount, credit amount, or time amount)
- encourage employees to take training outside of the office
- After an employee receives training, require them to deliver an internal training session to others. The purposes of these sessions should be to both transmit knowledge elsewhere in the organization and to make sure that the new training sinks in over time
Labels: business, organizational behavior, productivity
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Permanent space vs. hoteling
Some businesses have done away with permanent office space or cubicles. Instead, when an employee is in the office he or she registers for a place to sit and depending on availability gets a spot. Work or personal items that would have been kept in a permanent desk drawer may now be kept in a locker and moved to the temporary space each day. Colleagues who wish to find others may look them up on a website directory which lists the identification number of the cubicle or office which they are using that day.
The entire argument for hoteling, as this is known, is financial. Reduce your office real estate and save on the bottom line. However, what is lost from the top line in this structure? What is lost in terms of worker productivity and morale?
Labels: business, productivity
Friday, March 7, 2008
Rules of lunch, or Why to take a break
A few years ago I had a client who was a senior member of a large real estate development firm. During one lunchtime conversation he looked back over a career that spanned 40 years and talked about a few of the things he had accomplished of which he was proud. One of them, curiously, was his “lunch policy”. He has lunch almost every day in the office with colleagues of all levels. At lunch he has two rules. First, if you are busy with something or have other plans you take care of lunch yourself and don’t disrupt the lunch of others. Second, at the lunch table no discussion of work is allowed.
In the past, when I worked at a traditional management consulting firm I found that to many colleagues, lunch was just a time of day when you happened to eat while working. The idea of leaving the office to eat somewhere else while not working was foreign and the perception of having done so was to be avoided. I could never understand why people could think that being seen working through lunch would make them more effective or raise their perceived value to the firm. Eventually I came to eat lunch with the colleagues who felt the same way I did or with clients who never even heard of the issue.
I never could figure out what kept the others so busy. In fact, I came to believe that they were always working because they were less efficient due to the fact that they were, you guessed it, always working.
My recommendation is to take a break, go out, walk around, refresh your mind and be more productive.
Labels: business, creativity, organizational behavior, productivity
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Does social networking keep people from changing and developing?
When I grew up I didn’t know anyone who used email, cell phones were rare, and social networking websites were non-existent. As a result I had no simple way to stay in touch with most people I grew up with, especially when people moved. In the past I also knew a great number of people whose phone number or address I never learned, but whom I would see regularly. Staying in touch didn’t seem to be a problem.
Contrast that with a younger generation that will probably maintain some contact with most of their friends from high school throughout their college and working years. Even if the contact is passive via a social networking site, one potentially may maintain that network forever rather than losing it with physical distance.
On the rare occasions when I meet up with friends from more than a decade ago, the retelling of stories of the past and common memories means that we often temporarily settle back into the personas and styles of those earlier years. However, these situations are the exception for me since I only occasionally see my friends from youth as is probably typical of most people my age who have moved around.
Would one be less able to change if that cohort of friends followed one through life via today’s social networking tools? If so, will the generation that grew up with Friendster, Myspace and Facebook change less over time from its youth? Will the unbreakable threads of history keep this generation from evolving?
Labels: culture
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Memory as art
I saw something recently that reminded me of an earlier post (Your Brain Is Not a Closet). A month or so ago I attended a gallery opening at BUIA Gallery in Chelsea of Eve Tremblay’s “Becoming Fahrenheit 451”. Ms. Tremblay actually recited Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 from memory (ok, with some starts and stops, but still, what an amazing accomplishment). Like the characters in the novel who memorize books, Ms. Tremblay reminded us of how powerful memory is if we develop it.
Labels: arts, creativity, culture


