Booklinks: Wheel$pin: Regaining Traction in a Fast Changing Business World by Maximizing Your Organizational Agility.

 

Richardson_3DRendering_Web.jpgScroll down and/or click into this item to find the full list of companion links from the book, "Wheel$pin:  Regaining Traction in a Fast Changing Business World by Maximizing Your Organizational Agility" organized in numerical order in which they appear in the book and by chapter/page number.  Each link will take you to additional content, materials and resources as refereneced in the book.  Scroll down and/or click into this item to see the full list.  Enjoy.

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Booklink 1: Supplement your Learning and Application with Online Content

Supplement your learning and application with online content, giving you pragmatic tips, techniques, and tools that will continue evolving over time.  The book acts as a portal and keystone summary to this online content which will keep you up to date by referencing new events, stories, case-studies and ideas. 

Book Graphics - file icon.jpg

Also, in this first booklink, here are links to files containing all the graphics from the book, full-size and animated, for you to use any way you choose—perhaps to bring your team up to speed or put on your wall as reminders.  Due to file size of the Power Point files, here are several componet files you can download:

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Booklink 2: The Eastern Airlines Story

What happened in that cockpit that day?  Eastern Airlines.jpgWatch the video at the In the Driving Seat channel on YouTube

 

Recovering and listening to the cockpit voice recorder (CVR), the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) concluded in its final report that the cause of the crash was pilot error and specifically: "the failure of the flight crew to monitor flight instruments during the final four minutes of flight and to detect an unexpected descent soon enough to prevent impact with the ground. Preoccupation with a malfunction of the nose landing gear position indicating system distracted the crew’s attention from the instruments and allowed the descent to go unnoticed"

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Booklink 3: Detail Complexity & Dynamic Complexity

In his 1990 book, The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, Peter Senge explains the difference between detail complexity and dynamic complexity:

"The reason that sophisticated tools of forecasting and business analysis, as well as elegant strategic plans, usually fail to produce dramatic breakthroughs in managing a business—they are all designed to handle the sort of complexity in which there are many variables: detail complexity. But there are two types of complexity. The second type is dynamic complexity, situations where cause and effect are subtle and where the effects over time of interventions are not obvious.  Conventional forecasting, planning and analysis methods are not equipped to deal with dynamic complexity. The real leverage in most management situations lies in understanding dynamic complexity not detail complexity."(The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, Peter Senge, 1990).

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Booklink 4: Situational Awareness, Intuition, Complex Adaptive Systems & Naturalistic Decision Makiing

 

In other fields of work that are acutely journey-oriented, the dynamic skills required are already highly developed, experientially and in the field, from which we can learn. Consider these scenarios:

  • A jet fighter pilot heading into a dogfight
  • A fire crew arriving at a burning building
  • A patient being wheeled into an ER
     

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Booklink 5: Vistage - Tapping into the Power of a Peer Group

Being a Vistage Chair is about helping our members interpret leading-edge thinking and experience from speakers and each other. It’s about helping them translate that into relevance and applicability in their particular business, in their particular situation, and with their particular needs and wants. It’s about facilitating their commitment and accountability for applying these ideas, sustaining them, and driving them through to results. It’s about “resulting.” Tapping into the power of a peer group process, we help them tackle all three dimensions of being In the Driving Seat, to be architects of their journey, creating traction in business and in life.

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Booklink 6: The Journey to Mastery

Being In the Driving Seat of organizational agility is complicated, and there is a lot to master. It is a long, rocky path, with no quick and easy payoffs and long stretches on the plateau. Dabblers, Obsessives, and Hackers hate the plateau (Dabbler, Obsessive, Hacker or Master?) whereas Masters learn to love the plateau, keep plodding along, and wage war against the barrage of the quick fix, fast temporary relief, bottom line, anti-mastery mentalities. 

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Booklink 7: The Frame-Rate of Change

Time Cover - what really happened 2000 - 2010.jpgAt the end of 2010, Time Magazine’s cover summarized the major upsets we had experienced in just the first decade of the new millenium:  TimeFrames Issue: What Really Happened 2000 - 2010

Also visit Time Magazine’s TimeFrames landing page for more on this project and watch the introductory video: 


You get the idea! The flow of major upsets seems to be coming at us thicker and faster all the time, at an ever increasing frame-rate of change! 

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Booklink 8: Charles Darwin’s Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection

250px-Charles_Darwin_seated_crop[1].jpg“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.” – Charles Darwin.

Darwin became intrigued by the diversity of species he saw all around the world, which were highly suited to their local environment and yet clearly had shared origins. He wondered what process could explain this, and eventually, in 1859, he published his Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection, explaining:

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Booklink 9: Integrative Thinking

Roger Martin.jpgIn his 2007 book, The Opposable Mind: How Successful Leaders Win Through Integrative Thinking, Roger Martin puts it well:

“The leaders I have studied share at least one trait, aside from their talent for innovation and long-term business success. They have the predisposition and the capacity to hold two diametrically opposing ideas in their heads. And then, without panicking or simply settling for one alternative or the other, they’re able to produce a synthesis that is superior to either opposing idea. Integrative thinking is my term for this processor—more precisely, this discipline of consideration and synthesis—that is the hallmark of exceptional businesses and the people who run them.”

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Booklink 10: A Modern Jet-Fighter Plane

Fighter Jet.jpgThe airframe of a modern jet fighter plane (such as the F-22 or the F-35) is not designed with gliding in mind. Unlike other aircraft for which the airframe is structured for gliding, a modern jet fighter is designed to be implicitly unstable and in a state of disequilibrium. If you turn everything off, it crashes. Plain and simple. What keeps it in the air under normal circumstances? The fly-by-wire computers, keeping it stable by making micro-adjustments many times a second to cope with the disequilibrium.

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Booklink 11: A Whole New Mind

 

Whole New Mind.jpgIn his 2005 book, "A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age", Daniel Pink explains:

“We are moving from an economy and a society built on the logical, linear, computer-like capabilities of the Information Age to an economy built on the inventive, empathetic, big-picture capabilities of what’s rising in its place, the Conceptual Age. Today, the defining skills of the previous era—the “left brain” capabilities that powered the Information Age—are necessary but no longer sufficient. The “right brain” qualities of inventiveness, empathy, joyfulness, and meaning increasing will determine who flourishes and who flounders. For individuals, families, and organizations, professional success and personal fulfillment now require a whole new mind"

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Booklink 12: High Reliability Organizations

Karl Weick.jpgIn their 2007 book, "Managing the Unexpected: Resilient Performance in an Age of Uncertainty", Karl Weick and Kathleen Sutcliffe say:

 “Unexpected events often audit our resilience. They affect how much we stretch without breaking and then how well we recover. Some of those audits are mild. But others are brutal. Unrecognized mild audits often turn brutal.  High Reliability Organizations (HROs) practice a form of organizing that reduces the brutality of audits and speeds up the process of recovering".

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Booklink 13: The OODA Loop

OODA Loop (2).jpgJet fighter pilots implicitly understand the real time anatomy of a journey, as they are trained in something called the OODA Loop The Fighter-Pilot’s OODA Loop:  Observe; Orient; Decde; Act. and read more at Wikipedia:  OODA Loop.

Police Driving Schhol.jpgSee video playlist at the In the Driving Seat channel on YouTube, including video of a Police Driving Shool (London Metropolitan Police, UK), including footage of trainees giving a running commentary verbalizing their OODA Loop while in emergency response driving situations.

Booklink 14: The Journey-ionics Model

Slide20.JPGJourney-ionics is a conceptual model helping us understand journeys at a microscopic level and how we link and accumulate the "ions" of a journey as individual thoughts, questions, decisions and actions.

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Booklink 15: Pre-Adaptation

Gary Hamel.jpg In his 2007 book, "The Future of Management", Gary Hamel relates pre-adaptation to business and our organizational agility challenge, putting it this way:

"Evolution occasionally equips organisms with apparently superfluous, reproductively neutral features that turn out, quite by accident, to be highly useful when conditions change. This is known as pre-adaptation. To be resilient, a company needs a lot of lightly scripted pre-adaptation—policies that give associates the chance to pre-adapt rather than react. Too much of what gets done in most companies is in response to some already pressing issue; there’s no slack, no space for improvisation, and no way to defend projects that aren’t immediately useful. That’s why so many companies end up on the wrong side of the change curve. Your job as a management innovator is to make sure that the management systems in your company encourage strategic pre-adaptation.”

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Booklink 16: Think “Agile Software Development”

Agile Software Development.jpgA great analogy for organizational agility comes from the field of software development and the emergence of the new paradigm of “Agile Software Development.”  Read more at Think “Agile Software Development” for the “Soft-ware” of Organizational Agility.

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Booklink 17: Putting on our 3-D Glasses

 3D Glasses.jpgWe are progressively exploring the three dimensions of the void we need to fill, to be fully filling our role In the Driving Seat of our business and the agility we need as an organization.  How we see is how we think is how we act.  We are helping you see the three dimensions of the challenge as clearly as you need to.  

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Booklink 18: The Five Disciplines of a Learning Organization

Slide33.JPGIn his book, "The Fifth Discipline", Peter Senge outlines the five disciplines of learning organizations, saying, “Today, I believe, five new ‘component technologies’ are gradually converging to innovate learning organizations. Systems thinking, mental models, personal mastery, shared vision, and team learning & dialogue are inescapable elements of building learning organizations.” We can map these five components into the Execution Excellence 2.0 model.

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Booklink 19: Journey Judgment Opportunity Assessment & 90 Day Plan

Opportunity Assessment & 90 Day Plan v12_Page_1.jpgThe Journey-Judgment Opportunity Assessment translates the 13 moving parts of the Journey-judgment model of Execution Excellence into 13 driving disciplines for reducing wheelspin, increasing traction, and brewing up a BREAKTHROUGH! with your organizational agility. It provides a template with which to judge where you are in your journey, evolving from a 1.0 postadaptive mode through 2.0 to a 3.0, preadaptive mode, for each of the 13 driving disciplines and associated component parts of Journey-judgment model of Execution Excellence. It helps you assess your opportunities for improvement and architecting a BREAKTHROUGH!

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Booklink 20: The B of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide11.JPGBringing Journey Orientation into focus.

 

 

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Booklink 21: The first R of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide21.JPGReinforcing a Mindset of Operations Management.

 

 

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Booklink 22: The Principles of HROs (High Reliability Organizations)


Booklink 23: The E of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide31.JPGEnhancing Strategic Productivity.

 

 

 

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Booklink 24: The A of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide4.JPGAccentuating Short-Range Culture.

 

 

 

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Booklink 25: The K of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide5.JPGKeeping our Flight Planning envelope expanded to our full Execution Excellence agenda.

 

 

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Booklink 26: The T of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide6.JPGTackling Operational Productivity.

 

 

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Booklink 27: The first H of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide7.JPGHolding a Recurring, Rigorous & Rallying Strategy Process.

 

 

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Booklink 28: The second R of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide8.JPGRe-engineering Structures, Processes & Systems.

 

 

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Booklink 29: The O of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide9.JPGOrchestrating a Goal-Setting Cascade & Review Process.

 

 

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Booklink 30: Quad Report


Booklink 31: The U of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide101.JPGUnlocking & Challenging Mental Models.

 

 

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Booklink 32: Blue Ocean Thinking


Booklink 33: The G of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide111.JPGGuiding Leadership/Communication Skills & Style.

 

 

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Booklink 34: The second H of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide12.JPGHandling Accountability for Long-Range Culture.

 

 

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Booklink 35: The ! of BREAKTHROUGH! stands for:

Slide13.JPG!ntegrating our Enterprise Execution Capability & Capacity.

 

 

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