
By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 30 Apr 22
By Diederick Janse, Guest writer for Corporate Rebels, and originally published at corporaterebels.com Methods are useful. They are like a recipe, encoding the lessons learned by others and helping us avoid common pitfalls. They also carry a risk, however. We tend to get attached to our methods, blinding us to whatever doesnât fit. I speak from experience. In 2007 I discovered Holacracy, a method for running an organization differently (these days itâs called self-organization or self-management). I went all-in. I got trained, wrote a book (Dutch, English), and co-founded a company. I became one of those pesky evangelists that believe their method is the …
By Diederick Janse, Guest writer for Corporate Rebels, and originally published at corporaterebels.com Methods are useful. They are like a recipe, encoding the lessons learned by others and helping us avoid common pitfalls. They also carry a risk, however. We tend to get attached to our methods, blinding us to whatever doesnât fit. I speak from experience. In 2007 I …

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 16 Mar 22
By Andreea G. Petruse and Carlo Monsanto for Enlivening Edge Magazine In the current evolution of living organizations, we have a unique opportunity to mature our connection to ourselves, our purpose, and one another. We can begin to remember that our work can be an extension of what we love in life, what we wish to wholeheartedly offer life, and we can wake up in the morning bringing our soul to work. To achieve this, we must sincerely ask ourselves and each other: What motivates you? For next-stage organizations, the whole of our humanity is of the essence; it defines …
By Andreea G. Petruse and Carlo Monsanto for Enlivening Edge Magazine In the current evolution of living organizations, we have a unique opportunity to mature our connection to ourselves, our purpose, and one another. We can begin to remember that our work can be an extension of what we love in life, what we wish to wholeheartedly offer life, and …

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 19 Jan 22
If you want to take a shortcut, this blog is launching an explainer on vector theory of changeâa theory of change for complex systems. *** Imagine standing at the base of a mountain. As you look up, the mist rises into a thick fog obscuring the terrain in front of you. Youâre holding a map in your hands. It is scant of detail; it only shows key landmarks/milestones along the way with almost no indication of the type of terrain. There is only one path illustrated on the map and it leads straight up the mountain. Itâs not easy to …
Vector theory of change â a theory of change for complex systems Read More »
If you want to take a shortcut, this blog is launching an explainer on vector theory of changeâa theory of change for complex systems. *** Imagine standing at the base of a mountain. As you look up, the mist rises into a thick fog obscuring the terrain in front of you. Youâre holding a map in your hands. It is …
Vector theory of change â a theory of change for complex systems Read More »

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 8 Nov 21
By Frederic Laloux and originally published at reinventingorganizations.com This is tenth and last in a series Striving for Wholeness, exploring what Wholeness looks like in the workplace. The other videos in the series can be found here. Not everyone will feel comfortable with the invitation to show up more fully. There might be valuable information hidden in their resistance to your invitation. Could it be that your invitation is more than an invitation? Or that your invitation is disconnected from the work in the organization? 7 mins 45 secs Comment guidelines on the original article: âMy hope is for the comments below the video …
Lalouxâs Insights: When More Wholeness Brings Up Resistance Read More »
By Frederic Laloux and originally published at reinventingorganizations.com This is tenth and last in a series Striving for Wholeness, exploring what Wholeness looks like in the workplace. The other videos in the series can be found here. Not everyone will feel comfortable with the invitation to show up more fully. There might be valuable information hidden in their resistance to your …
Lalouxâs Insights: When More Wholeness Brings Up Resistance Read More »

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 27 Oct 21
By Alia Aurami for Enlivening Edge Magazine* “The only constant, permanent thing in life is change itself.â âŒHeraclitus, Ancient Greek Philosopher Constant change is tough for people who aren’t used to it and have no specific skills for dealing with change itself. Yet changing with resilience is a habit, capacity, or skillset people can cultivate. We organizational innovators have experienced a thing or two about the process of adapting to frequent change. Our challenge is whether weâve learned enough from our experience to play a helpful role for humanity in current times. What resilience skills learned from our work as …
By Alia Aurami for Enlivening Edge Magazine* “The only constant, permanent thing in life is change itself.â âŒHeraclitus, Ancient Greek Philosopher Constant change is tough for people who aren’t used to it and have no specific skills for dealing with change itself. Yet changing with resilience is a habit, capacity, or skillset people can cultivate. We organizational innovators have experienced …

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 20 Mar 21
A target audience of cocreators?As part of my work with the Cocreation Foundation, I am writing a book about global cocreation. And I constantly get asked: âWhat is the target audience for this book?âHonestly? I donât know! At least not in a conventional sense. I am not writing a book for a specific market or a target audience whose needs and desires I claim to know and serve. I am writing a book I feel is necessary to write because it is my contribution to the process we are in as humanity at this particular time in history.Having said that: of course, …
A target audience of cocreators?As part of my work with the Cocreation Foundation, I am writing a book about global cocreation. And I constantly get asked: âWhat is the target audience for this book?âHonestly? I donât know! At least not in a conventional sense. I am not writing a book for a specific market or a target audience whose needs and …

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 20 Mar 21
A target audience of cocreators?As part of my work with the Cocreation Foundation, I am writing a book about global cocreation. And I constantly get asked: âWhat is the target audience for this book?âHonestly? I donât know! At least not in a conventional sense. I am not writing a book for a specific market or a target audience whose needs and desires I claim to know and serve. I am writing a book I feel is necessary to write because it is my contribution to the process we are in as humanity at this particular time in history.Having said that: of course, …
A target audience of cocreators?As part of my work with the Cocreation Foundation, I am writing a book about global cocreation. And I constantly get asked: âWhat is the target audience for this book?âHonestly? I donât know! At least not in a conventional sense. I am not writing a book for a specific market or a target audience whose needs and …

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 5 Jul 20
I have been seeing one small piece of the landscape, a branch of a forest.Continue reading on Medium »
I have been seeing one small piece of the landscape, a branch of a forest.Continue reading on Medium »

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 5 Jul 20
I have been seeing one small piece of the landscape, a branch of a forest.Continue reading on Medium »
I have been seeing one small piece of the landscape, a branch of a forest.Continue reading on Medium »

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 4 Jul 20
We are living in a world in which it is a given that one should not bother caring about things that cannot be changed.Continue reading on Medium »
We are living in a world in which it is a given that one should not bother caring about things that cannot be changed.Continue reading on Medium »
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