11/24/09

Gardeners call it pruning: Forced abandonment for 2010

In Living in More than One World, Bruce Rosenstein captures the essence of Peter Drucker's lifelong quest to teach managers that "living in more than one world," means letting go often and with mindfulness.

Gardeners call the letting go process "pruning."  Parents call it "grounding." Peter Drucker upped the ante and called it "forced abandonment."  

But there is a difference between me pruning a tree and me force abandoning my long held plan to accomplish X or Y in my lifetime. The latter takes a lot more chutzpah. 

The season between Thanksgiving and New Year's is a wonderful time for reflection and rebalancing. Perhaps instead of a New Year's resolution this year, we should think about our possible forced abandonments. Could be just the trick.

____________

“The educated person will…have to be prepared to live and work simultaneously in two cultures— that of the ‘intellectual’ who focuses on words and ideas, and that of the ‘manager’ who focuses on people and work.”
Peter F. Drucker, Post-Capitalist Society

The Drucker Institute

 ...

11/18/09

Rosabeth Moss Kanter's 15-minute competitive advantage

Just like your children need to be able to understand and incorporate changes in roles and expectations at home, so do your clients need to understand and incorporate the innovations you present to them before they will support you. This is especially important for innovations within the health care system.

For inspiration, here is Rosabeth Moss Kanter's short list of innovations most likely to succeed at gaining the support of your customers. They are fiendishly simple:

  • Trial-able: The idea or product can be demonstrated on a pilot basis. Customers can see it in action first and incorporate it on a small scale before committing to replace everything.
  • Divisible: It can be adopted in segments or phases. Users can ease into it, a step at a time. They can even use it in parallel with current solutions.
  • Reversible: If it doesn't work, it's possible to return to pre-innovation status. Eventually you want life to be unimaginable without it, but at least in theory, it's possible to go back to zero.
  • Tangible: It offers concrete results that can be seen to make a difference in something that users need and value.
  • Fits prior investments: The idea builds on "sunk costs" or actions already taken, so it looks like not much change is involved.
  • Familiar: It feels like things that people already understand, so it is not jarring to use. It is consistent with other experiences, especially successful ones.
  • Congruent with future direction: It is in line with where things are heading anyway. It doesn't require people to rethink their priorities or pathways, even though of course it changes things.
  • Positive publicity value: It will make everyone look good.
I hope you'll read the entire article, "Find the 15-Minute Competitive Advantage." Ms. Kanter is one of the finest business writers out there.

BIO: Rosabeth Moss Kanter holds the Ernest L. Arbuckle Professorship at Harvard Business School, where she specializes in strategy, innovation, and leadership for change. Her strategic and practical insights have guided leaders of large and small organizations worldwide for over 25 years. The former Editor of Harvard Business Review (1989-1992), Professor Kanter has been named to The Times of London list of the “50 most powerful women in the world”.

Her latest book is SuperCorp: How Vanguard Companies Create Innovation, Profits, Growth, and Social Good. At Harvard, she is chair and director of the Advanced Leadership Initiative, a University-wide faculty group aimed at deploying a leadership force of experienced leaders who can address challenging national and global problems in their next stage of life.