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Seasons 2remember
Seasons 2remember










seasons 2remember
  1. #Seasons 2remember how to#
  2. #Seasons 2remember series#

You don’t “win” at it by completing a final process. The speed at which new products can come to market, the decoupling of the production of an object from its design and sales, and the rate at which the markets and technologies change make any stolid process unsustainable and dangerous.Ĭontinuous improvement, therefore, becomes a constant effort to be the best that you can be at the design, creation, sales, and re-creation of your product. This is a domain where business process or team process can change from moment to moment. In most human endeavor today, certainly in knowledge work, but increasingly in manufacturing, we do not operate in the complicated domain, we operate in the complex domain. (I will go into detail about Cynefin at Quote #5, until then, check out the wikipedia page). This limits systems thinking to what Dave Snowden’s Cynefin Model calls the complicated domain. I have been to many web sites of many people who claim to be systems thinkers who specifically promise explicitly to map out the real processes of a company and then create new processes that will remain permanent.

seasons 2remember

If they want a group of people “fixed”, so they will do their jobs better, that is a trap. If people want a set of processes that will not change in the future, that is a trap.

seasons 2remember

The trap here lies in describing an end-state for the systems thinking effort that is somehow permanent. So they need actionable items that they can understand. While we would like to be ideological purists, those who hire systems thinkers would like to actually do something. This means we are often asked to work towards some set of end-goals. In systems thinking, we have to operate in the real-world. Psychologists call this “ subjective validation”. So we feel we are most always right in our decisions and beliefs. Unfortunately, for us, we build these models at such a rate that we rarely have them disproved. We unconsciously constantly build systems in our heads to explain why things happened. How was the system I created yesterday wrong? What is my impetuous recklessness? Systems Thinking is a Trap Here Because We Still Expect to “Win” at Continuous ImprovementĪs mentioned in the previous Quote, our world-views get in our way all the time. Therefore, systems thinking is often about our own self-exploration.

#Seasons 2remember how to#

Systems thinking is all about how to turn normal operations upside-down and see the unexpected reasons for both success and failure. When we use systems thinking, we are actively asking ourselves “Why is this working as it does?” If we are good systems thinkers, we open ourselves to all possibilities and expect to be surprised. Systems Thinking is Awesome Here Because Most Often We Are Battling Ourselves Luke’s own impetuous recklessness is staring him in the face. So, Luke goes into the cave and runs into Darth Vader, or some Darth Vadery thing, and they have a little light saber duel and Luke cuts Vader’s head off, only to find his own face behind Vader’s mask. Yoda is then all, like, “Hey knock yourself out, I’m just hundreds of years old and really smart, you want to ignore my wisdom and go into the cave … by all means.” It creeps Luke out and Yoda says, in essence, “Dude, skip the cave.”īut Luke feels the dark side of the force in the cave and feels compelled to check it out. Luke Skywalker has just finished some fitness exercises with Yoda and they come across a cave. So, it’s an average day on Dagobah, rainy, hot, humid.

#Seasons 2remember series#

(This is part 2 of a 5 part series that starts here)












Seasons 2remember