Category Archives: Books

#184 Barriers to engagement

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As Benjamin Franklin has said, “Tell me and I forget, teach me and I may remember, involve me and I learn.”

You get excited by the possibilities and reach out your co-workers to involve them in your ideas. You are stunned and frustrated by the stonewalling and resistance. Then you are overcome by curiosity, after all, it is highly unlikely that Ben was wrong. Besides, it makes perfect sense.

Then it dawns on you to ask whether Ben ever explained how to involve him. You look at the diverse stakeholders in your workplace, wonder how you will figure out how to involve each and every one of them, and think to yourself, “this is a lot of work.”

Fortunately for us, the steps to involve and engage have been documented for us (here is one example, here is another). Yes, it is all about managing change.

The key point here is, involvement for involvement’s sake is a waste of time. There is a business goal in the workplace, make that your end game and involve/engage your co-workers towards that end. This will work best when it is not be about you or your ego, and when you are open to ideas that will achieve business goals faster, cheaper, and better.

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#182 Building a learning organization (book)

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As a leader, you have to inspire yourself and others to be the best you can be. Depending on where you are in your leadership journey, you could be getting started or you could be building momentum.

Your efforts will be easier if you can get your co-workers to carry some of that load. You need to build a learning organization, and the Fifth Discipline documents a roadmap and techniques for helping you do just that.

My favorite part of the book is the introduction to systems thinking. This is as good a framework for analyzing cause and effect as it gets. An important caveat: You cannot know or discover every cause for every effect. Once you embrace this fact, you will notice it becomes much easier for you to build a learning organization.

While the book is eye opening and you will be tempted to try every idea you get, you will gain maximum benefit if you understand the business goals of your organization and start from there. Simply adopting a technique because it sounds cool will be counter productive.

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