You are hearing more and more that the current recession has bottomed out, that the economic crisis is easing as job losses slow and we are beginning to see confidence return to the marketplace. This is good news indeed as we turn from survival and begin to look forward.
Nevertheless, the global business environment is becoming more and more interconnected and complex.
The future will see new uncertainties, ambiguities and even more surprises. Our world is acting as a complex system, and what we are now experiencing is just a taste of what will undoubtedly come.
Continue reading "Thriving in the Age of Complexity - With no answers, only choices" »
January 5, 2009
To Whom It May Concern:
Significant changes in your environment require an immediate strategic review to refocus your competitive advantage. Strategy is all about future differences, creating your future, the competitive difference you can bring, and how you identify and take advantage of the resulting new opportunities. In this economic crisis, in this critical moment, how you chose to act and respond will have far reaching impacts for you and your organization.
Now is the time for reconsidered strategy - for your organization, your business units, and your alliances and partnerships – creating precise actions aligned with that strategy, with an eye ready to see the opportunities that are clearly beginning to emerge.
While the jury is out on how long this crisis will continue, one thing is sure: The world simply will not look nor act the same afterwards.
Continue reading "An Open Letter: Leadership and Strategy in the Crisis" »
One of the concepts Steve Barth and I have been developing is the idea of Knowledge Tense. We spoke to it at KM World in 2007, and then again I used it in the context of innovation at KM World 2008 in a workshop.
We wanted to distinguish between past, present and future tense knowledge, not having seen or heard this distinction before. Needless to say, we are just beginning to think about knowledge this way.
Continue reading "Knowledge Tense: Past, Present and Future" »
One of the more interesting topics of recent conversation is the idea that this economic crisis really has no model or pattern that is discernable from past downturns and crises.
I was listening to Nassim Taleb (The Black Swan) this past Sunday morning on Fareed Zakaria's (The Post-America World) GPS show: He and the other roundtable members made some very compelling points about the unique nature of the current crisis. And after listening to some other folks, and thinking about some recent work I have done, there are some critical new ways of thinking you need in this crisis.
Continue reading "Strategy in the Current Crisis: Thinking and Acting in the Recession" »