Wednesday, February 26, 2014
The Value of Allrounders
In sports there is a real appreciation for allrounders. Traditionally,
the title of "World's
Greatest Athlete" has been given to the man who wins the Olympic decathlon. In
athletics there is also the pentathlon . In speed skating, there is the
European and World Championship for allrounders (men do skate 500m, 1500m, 5000m and 10000m). In
cricket, an allrounder is a guy who regularly performs well at both batting and
bowling.
These athletes are very well appreciated. Of course there
are still the athletes who only perform at single distances/activities, but the
allrounders are considered to be ….. well allround!
This appreciation is totally lacking for allrounders in
business, NGO’s and in government. Whereas the need for people who ‘can connect
the dots’ is increasing rapidly. See also
this post: http://permamarks.org/world-needs-generalists/
Many problems are quite complex and connected, so you do
need people who can easily understand and relate to the respective topics and
take the appropriate actions.
Business has to wake up and quickly attract these
allrounders!
Thursday, February 20, 2014
The city without a soul
Recently I did listen to a
podcast about the growing power of cities. As most people are living in cities
now, existing cities are growing beyond their limits and new cities are being
established.
An example of such a new city
is Songdo
in Korea, a $ 40 billion project. The reporter did share her experience being
there. She was not planning on living there, as it appears to be a “city
without a soul”.
Again, this is an example
where technology and business goals are taking precedence over human needs. But
what is a city without people?
There are also many companies
without a soul. The core mission of those organizations is to produce results
and humans are not part of the design, they are just part of the resources. But
what is a company without people?
Humans are the main users of
companies and of cities. You could even call them the most important customers.
Design Thinking principles
are being used to put the user at the heart of the process, of everything.
How would cities,
organizations, companies, communities, houses look like when they are designed
with the main user (i.e. you and me) in mind? Wouldn’t it be great if they are
designed with your needs as the starting point and as the main metric (how
satisfied are you with your environment)?.
Isn’t it time to stand up and
take control and ownership for our basic conditions of life?
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