Degeneration and Transition
Stage-5: Empiricist
It is easy to see how these
values degenerate, especially in an organization that has not fully consolidated the stage. Information is then collected mechanically rather than as usable and used knowledge.Information use degenerates into Data accumulation.
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Increased certainty degenerates into Endless delay.
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Systematic investigation degenerates into Statistical trawling.
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Wide dissemination degenerates into Paper deluge.
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Lucid presentation degenerates into Irrelevance.
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Individualized knowledge degenerates into Fragmentation.
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Dispassionate objectivity degenerates into Pedantic arrogance.
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Which Mode Next?
Many organizations effectively consolidate and settle at this stage. Empiricism may be tweaked at the margins with creativity techniques, but the inherent limitations of the culture are not faced.
Empirical objectivity is not enough, because it looks back to the distant or immediate past. A capacity to look inward and forward is needed for:
● innovations and creative solutions
● addressing aspirations of committed staff
● earlier recognition of emerging problems
● better handling of habitual assumptions.
Pressures for cultural development become evident once facing the facts is habitual. The triggers for seeking a quantum increase in effectiveness are twofold:
● organizational ambitions to move into uncharted waters
● social desires for self-actualization in work.
Data trends are an uncertain guide to the future, and the past is a particularly poor guide for would-be creators of the future.
Ambitious and adventurous companies, those that want to be in the forefront of their sector, seek to enter new, uncharted waters.
To be effective, such organizations must routinely apply imagination to develop creative and inspired ideas if they are to manage the risks and thrive.
The value of self-actualization is now prevalent, in Western society at least and increasingly more widely.
Compliance, even willing compliance, with objective findings and common goals is just not enough for people, and will not produce outstanding success for organizations.
The organization that many of us want to be part of is powered by people who give it their full energy and whole-hearted commitment. Such commitment emerges from the identity, the deep aspirations, the very soul, of each person—precisely from where their creative potential springs.
These two triggers point in the same direction:
.
Anyone who wants to create an organization that maximizes its staff's contributions and uses inquiry to the full, must embrace the .
Originally posted: 17-Jun-2011