4th Global Peter Drucker Forum – Global Peter Drucker Forum BLOG http://www.druckerforum.org/blog Wed, 14 Sep 2016 12:12:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.4 Bottom-up management and the reintegration of former child soldiers: a profile of the Grassroots Reconciliation Group By Christopher Maclay http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=322 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=322#comments Wed, 19 Dec 2012 05:00:28 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=322 I was first introduced to Peter Drucker – and to the broader management discipline in general – through my entry to the inaugural Drucker Challenge in 2010 and subsequent participation at the Drucker Forum in Vienna that year. At the time I had been working on a poverty reduction programme in Bangladesh, and since my work has taken me to a variety of international contexts to engage with a variety of complex social problems. Each problem needs a different solution, and each solution requires a different approach. However, one managerial principle lies at the centre of any effective initiative in this field: participation.

 

In The Practice of Management, Drucker explained that, ‘A decision should always be made at the lowest possible level and as close to the scene of action as possible.’ In development and post-conflict programming, we need to enable those we are trying to help to be at the centre of all decisions, and to empower them to make the decisions themselves which will change their lives sustainably. In this holiday blog post, I am keen to introduce the Grassroots Reconciliation Group (GRG), a small NGO I currently work for in northern Uganda, which uses an innovative bottom-up management system to achieve its goal of reintegrating former child soldiers into community life.

 

While this year’s YouTube phenomenon, KONY2012, attracted a wealth of attention to the plight of child soldiers in northern Uganda, its critics have fairly pointed out that the issues it presented did not necessarily depict the nature of problems faced by formerly abducted people today. An estimated one in three boys and one in six girls in northern Uganda was abducted by the LRA during the twenty-year conflict. Between 33,000 and 50,000 children were used by the LRA as slaves, distributed as ‘wives’ among the rebel cadre, or forced to pillage and kill on the front line.

 

When I came back home, people said I had evil spirits. I felt as if I was being chased away.

Walter, Koc Goma parish

 ‘I felt like a stranger, like an outsider. I had no one to talk to and nobody seemed to trust me’.

Stella, Anaka Parish

 

The LRA left northern Uganda in 2006. The majority of these child soldiers and ex-combatants have also now returned to their villages. Indeed, most are no longer children. But the return home has presented a whole new set of challenges for these young adults; many are stigmatized because of the atrocities they committed, while others continue to be haunted by trauma from what they saw or did ‘in the bush’. With war and captivity preventing education or agricultural production, few have any employment today, or skills from which to gain an income.

 

When I first returned my mind was disturbed. This group has helped me to cope with everyday life; it has given me a purpose and a sense of belonging, something I hadn’t felt since I left LRA.’

Esther, Olwal 

 

The Grassroots Reconciliation Group was set up in 2007 to respond to this gaping need for community-based reintegration in northern Uganda. We have since worked with over 1,000 people, engaging groups which combine former child soldiers along with other community members to work together on reconciliation, peacebuilding, and livelihood-development activities. Evaluations have shown that 92% of beneficiaries report improved relationships after engaging in a GRG group. 67% have created new businesses as a result of GRG’s intervention, and 87% are now able to save money. This combination of improved relationships and livelihood opportunity has created hope and a new future.

 

Group members working together on collaborative farming

Above: Group members working together on collaborative farming.

 

What makes the findings all the more interesting – certainly to followers of this blog – is that the achievements result largely from an innovative management approach. While most NGO-projects in northern Uganda (and elsewhere) tend to be designed in air-conditioned HQ offices in London or New York (for example), GRG’s projects are all designed in villages, by the very people who GRG seeks to partner with and help. Each individual and each community is different. GRG itself works across a vast geographic area spreading from the main regional town of Gulu to the remote, dry Uganda-South Sudan border. Different groups face different challenges, and see different solutions to their problems. Not only must we respond to these diverse challenges, but we need those people we work with to feel that they are in control. Otherwise, impacts will be short-lived as beneficiaries will not feel in control of their own futures.

 

‘My relationship with the ex-combatants has improved because of farming together – when you go in the field and you laugh, you get to know how to talk to others and resolve disputes.’

Alex, Olwal parish.

 

Group members of ‘Kica Ber’ (meaning ‘Being Kinds is Good’) collaboratively identifying their priority problems.

Above: Group members of ‘Kica Ber’ (meaning ‘Being Kinds is Good’) collaboratively identifying their priority problems.

 

While companies seek to respond to the changing needs of their customers, GRG’s bottom-up model puts the customers in control of what they are provided with. GRG supports groups to explore their problems, and to identify the possible solutions themselves. Groups design their own long-term plans for individual and group development (see more here), and implement these plans themselves with GRG’s support. The most common area of our work is group livelihood support – where training and agricultural inputs increase skills and income among members, while also enabling groups to experience collaboration, problem-solving and bulk marketing for the first time – while other areas of work are as diverse as community microfinance, trauma counselling, traditional reconciliation ceremonies, and recreational opportunities.

 

GRG changes as the groups do, with change monitoring systems and a heavy presence in these communities enabling us to respond to new requirements as they arise.

Group members on the South Sudanese border performing a play about how to solve land conflicts to their fellow community members.

Above: Group members on the South Sudanese border performing a play about how to solve land conflicts to their fellow community members.

 

In Managing the Non-Profit Organization, Peter Drucker wrote: “The “non-profit” institution neither supplies goods or services nor controls. Its “product” is neither a pair of shoes nor an effective regulation. Its product is a changed human being. The non-profit institutions are human-change agents. Their “product” is a cured patient, a child that learns, a young man or woman grown into a self-respecting adult; a changed human life altogether.”

 

The ‘product’ of the Grassroots Reconciliation Group is a new future for the hundreds of former child soldiers in northern Uganda who GRG seek to reintegrate. Clearly, not an easy product to manufacture, nor immediately apparent what the product would look like. GRG’s bottom-up management approach enables clients decide what the ‘product’ will look like, and puts them in charge of production.

Members of Can Deg Wor (meaning ‘Poverty needs no quarrel’) sharing a joke while on a group activity.

Above: Members of Can Deg Wor (meaning ‘Poverty needs no quarrel’) sharing a joke while on a group activity.

 

To see more about GRG’s work, please check out our brand new video launch here. GRG’s work would not be possible without the generous donations of people like you. Your donation could help change the lives of more people like Esther and others in these pictures. Please donate here. Thank you, and Merry Christmas.

 

Feel free to contact Christopher at chris@grassrootsgroup.org. The views expressed in this blog post are those of the author alone, and do not necessarily represent those of GRG or any other party.

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The 2012 Drucker Forum – Never Stop Playing David Hurst http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=315 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=315#respond Mon, 10 Dec 2012 05:00:41 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=315 I returned over the weekend from the Drucker Forum in Vienna. It was a great conference! From my ecological perspective it was an “open patch”, a place in which people with many different backgrounds and perspectives can gather, have an open dialogue and exchange questions and answers. This is the “soil” in which new ideas of all kinds can grow without being crushed by giant orthodoxies.

 

On the first evening – a cocktail party for speakers and essay-winners – I introduced myself to a man standing alone. I noticed that he had a tiny gold medal pinned in his lapel. He was Dan Schechtman, winner of the 2011 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, and a pioneer of Israel’s entrepreneurial revolution. We spent about ten minutes talking about entrepreneurship, as well as his efforts to teach physics to very young children (5 year-olds). He described how he teaches the concept of phase states (solid, liquid and gas) by having them pretend that they are atoms and then forming different relationships with each other, depending on the state they are in. Thus for solids the atoms (children) are packed together as tightly as possible but for liquids they have to form molecules (two hydrogen atoms for every oxygen atom, in the case of water), which allows them to move around in little clusters, and so on. Professor Schectman is clearly a thinker in multiple dimensions and I was delighted to find that he was a fan of Bucky Fuller’s work. According to the Nobel Committee his discovery in the structure of crystals “… revealed a new principle for packing of atoms and molecules…this led to a paradigm shift within chemistry.” (Thanks, Wikipedia).

 

 

Playing in the Open Patch

 

The conference itself consisted of a series of plenary sessions and panels, more of which in future blogs. For the moment the big news is that my entry for the Drucker Essay Challenge, which was runner-up in the manager/entrepreneur division has been posted: PRACTICAL WISDOM – 2012 Drucker Essay. The awards were given out at a gala dinner that we held at the wonderful Palais Ferstel, which is attached to the Café Central, one of the key meeting places for the intellectual elite of Vienna in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Apparently Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky were regulars and the Vienna Circle of logical positivists met there often.

 

As I expected, I was by far the oldest of the award winners. When my turn came, I asked to say a few words to the assembled company. I began: “I should explain my “mature” condition. A few weeks ago I heard a wonderful quote from the CEO of LEGO: ‘You don’t stop playing when you grow old – you grow old when you stop playing.’” At that a sort of collective sigh ran through the group. I continued: “For me Peter Drucker never stopped playing and he never grew old.  Thank you very much.”

 

It was a great party that followed the awards and the enthusiasm and excitement among the younger essay winners was intense. As we all danced in a circle to the music of the well-known Austrian rock band Papermoon, it struck me that that the passion of these young people was as palpable as that of Dan Schectman’s and that the zeal with which he had spoken of entrepreneurship and teaching concepts from physics to very young children was quite as intense as theirs. It was this passion that seemed to permeate the entire conference and I feel sure that Peter Drucker would have endorsed it whole-heartedly: Never stop playing!

 

AUTHOR:

I am a speaker, consultant and management educator, who helps managers and organizations learn from their past, understand the present and create their future. As a reflective practitioner, I have a unique niche in the field.  I spent twenty-five years working in corporations in several countries in a series of organizational “train wrecks” as the Western World began its radical transition from the industrial era to the age of knowledge and information.  I extracted from my experience some highly innovative ideas about leadership, the management of change and the dynamics of organizations that promote creativity and learning. I have spent another two decades honing my thinking as a consultant and teacher.  I communicate these ideas to audiences around the world in the form of creative presentations, in-depth seminars and management development programs. My articles have been published in leading business publications such as the Financial Times, Globe and Mail, Harvard Business Review, Strategy+Business, and several academic journals.

 

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This post was first published on http://www.davidkhurst.com/.

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Capitalism 2.0 Is Coming by Marianne Abib-Pech http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=307 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=307#respond Thu, 06 Dec 2012 05:00:34 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=307 Vienna November 2012, Palace Ferstel, in the grand settings of the Palace, memories of Menger, Hayek, Freud and Kohr laced with Elizabeth Of Austria presence are lingering. Mitteleuropa no more…or actually more than ever?

This is the gala dinner of the 4th Peter Drucker Forum, the Austrian- born writer, teacher and consultant, who was once tagged as “the Man who invented management.” He liked to call himself a “social ecologist” – i.e. someone who deals with the man-made social environment in which we operate.

 

For two days last week, an eclectic mix of close to three hundred corporate executive, entrepreneurs and prominent members of Academia from all over the world gathered at the heart of the Austrian capital to debate and reflect on the future of Capitalism – no less!

 

The Forum covered a wide array of topics from role of education to the emerging needs of social entrepreneurship.

 

Squarely rooted in what we would now tag as more than familiar emerging global trends:

  • The unfolding worldwide value crisis
  • A burning imperative to reconcile profit and social justice, or as mentioned by Georg Kraft-Kinz the Deputy CEO of Raiffeisenlandesbank Noe-Wien and Holding, ‘economic success needs to be combined with welfare.’’
  • The raging talent war where… “Talent won” joked legal Peter Y. Solmssen – Member of the Managing Board and General Counsel of Siemens
  • The need to re-kindle economic elasticity via fostering entrepreneurship, that by the way can be taught as asserted by Dan Shechtman Professor Technion Israel Institute of Technology, Department of Materials and 2011 Nobel prize laureate in Chemistry
  • The impact of social media in traditional and emerging economies

 

The conference was however, thought provoking and innovative. It positioned itself as providing orientation in the jungle of ready made solutions and answers. Getting participants thinking in new ways about key issues was a key objective.

 

It was particularly evident in their challenge of the sacrosanct concept of shareholder value.

Shareholder value was for once not tagged as necessary evil that one would have to accept and live with, but as a concept in great need of tweaking and repackaging as Roger L. Martin, the dean of Rotman School of Management eloquently described.

The notion of “comprehensive profit” – profit that would harmoniously balance short-termism and sustainability was presented and debated, but not in a vacuum.

Different operating models – from customer owned companies, to entirely non-profit organization, from global partnership, to state-owned entities were presented to give a framework or contextualized the concept. The models worked as a large term of reference to explore, pick and choose, mix and match.

 

This desire to show potential paths for evolution was even clearer when the role of education was tackled and the need of constant learning to engrain in the wonderful world of corporate.

“Corporate acts as environment were not enough space is given to develop new mental maps of thinking” mentioned Thomas Sattelberger Vice-President Board of Trustees, European Foundation for Management Development (EFMD). the role of business schools of the future would be to act as laboratories of creations of ideas and minds.

“Opening closed systems, by pushing the exploration side to the traditional exploitation side that corporations cherish so much is the name of the new game, creating army of volunteers workers that feel thriving” he added.
Roger Martins Opposable mind meets purpose driven millennial- should be the battle cry of any corporate executive.

 

So what it is to bring back home?

 

The first thing is thinking differently, breaking free from some of the old models is the only way to create a paradigm shift. There is a community of kindred spirits in the Peter Drucker Forum- ready to step in and help. It is a question of taking the first step and reaching out.

 

The second thing, and it will appear counterintuitive, the community of kindred spirits that showed up in Vienna was largely European, educated, born and raised. It comes with predefined psyche and patterns.

 

As the executive of a prominent pharmaceutical company currently stationed in Brazil mentioned, “There is an emerging theme in Brazil- Capitalism is too important for us to leave it to the capitalists. Emerging countries want to create their model of capitalism and, actually of leadership that talk to them, makes sense for them.”
Europe and the US are not longer the reference. Asia is too fragile stuck between Lee Kwan Yew benevolent leadership and the new direction of China 18th Party directives Africa is still suffering from perception issues hard for westerners to truly overcome.

 

The world currently emerging is still hesitating between a muli-polar structure or a truly global and collaborative structure. What is it going to be and how can we influence it?

 

This is the challenge I want to pose to the 5th edition of the Peter Drucker Forum, let’s hear it from the BRIC, the next eleven, the women, the twenty something, and the African – they ARE the paradigm shift- let’s debate collaboration and technology they are the driving shaping forces of economies and leadership of tomorrow… Until 2013.

 

AUTHOR:

Marianne Abib-Pech has led a highly successful international career in finance. She left France, her home country, in her twenties to study Finance and Business organization at Herriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. She then worked for some of the most admired corporations of the past twenty years, from Arthur Andersen and Motorola to General Electric and finally Shell, as Global CFO of one of their downstream divisions. She was the only woman ever hired externally at this level of the finance organization in Shell.

 

Throughout her career, she has been exposed to the best leadership training possible and always demonstrated a keen interest in developing leaders within and outside her own teams.
Marianne is the Founder of Leaders! a global leadership consultancy and think tank operating in Europe and Asia. Leaders! Specifically focuses on leadership emergence, leadership transformation and cognitive diversity – gender, cultural and generational – to create business value.
Marianne is a regular columnist in The Huffington Post, The Independent and Global Corporate Venturing. The Financial Times Guide to Leadership is her first book.
She currently splits her time between Hong–Kong, London and Paris.

 


 

This post was first published on http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk.

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Learning from the Forum report by Drucker Challenge winner Yavnika Khanna, Capgemini http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=297 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=297#respond Tue, 04 Dec 2012 05:00:33 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=297 For me, the greatest learning from Drucker’s ideas and the Forum is that it is not enough for managers and tomorrow’s leaders to recognize that the world around them in a constant state of chaos. Besides “business –as usual”, organizations today have an additional role to play in overcoming the cloud of distrust that has surrounded private sector as a response to the recent recessionary situations. In the words of Adrian Wooldridge, one of the keynote speakers at the Forum and columnist for The Economist, “we must pay heed to the warnings of the external environment”. Managers and organizations must shed managerial myopia, and as suggested by Rick Wartzman, a columnist for Forbes, resolve the “disconnect between what we know, what we say and do.” Organizations and its people need to continually evaluate how they are contributing to the wealth producing capacity and adding value through innovation and operational excellence. One notable example was provided by Patrick Deconinck, Senior Vice President of 3M, when he talked about 3M’s practice of measuring “Innovation Vitality” through an index. Kathleen Mazzarella (CEO of Graybar) and Peter Solmssen (Member of Managing Board at Siemens, AG) stressed on employee- centric and participatory business models, so crucial for profitability, growth and a competitive advantage. Pierre Hessler, Capgemini’s Chairman’s delegate, in his signature style moderated an excellent panel on “Looking for signposts for future” which aptly summarized experiences of offspring of capitalism 2.0: cooperatives, employee owned corporations, partnerships vs. traditional organizations. This is the sunny side of the capitalistic reality is that organizations have found collaborative models to sustain and thrive. Continuing the theme of alliance building, Professor Linda Gratton of London Business School stressed the importance of technology and open collaboration systems. The Forum also touched on how Capitalism has adapted to local contexts, providing interesting realities. Professor John Quelch of China Europe International Business School in his amazing talk, provided cases of how companies are adapting marketing communication to a digitalized and community based society in China. Alexander Triebnigg, President of Novartis in Brazil described the “state capitalism” model. Paul Polman, CEO of Unilever also mentioned how consumer expectations are changing world over, and how they contrast in Europe and other markets.
Overall, an excellent platform to absorb advice from the best!

 

Download the complete report.

 

AUTHOR: 

Yavnika Khanna is currently a project manager at Capgemini Consulting. Besides a bachelors degree in Business Studies from Delhi University and an MBA from KJ Somaiya Institute of Management and Research (SIMSR), she holds about 5 years of professional experience with various international consultancies.She is also the founder member and elected National Coordinator of Liberal Youth Forum- India (lyfindia.org), a youth organization promoting the ideas of liberty, market principles and self- governance. She is also one of the winners in managers/entrepreneurs category at Drucker Challenge 2012.

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Peter Drucker Forum: Capitalism 2.0: new horizons for managers by Vlatka Hlupic http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=291 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=291#respond Fri, 30 Nov 2012 05:00:03 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=291 Last week I attended the Fourth Global Peter Drucker Forum, an international management conference dedicated to promote the legacy of Peter Drucker, a management professor, consultant and the world’s best known writer on management. The theme for this Forum was “Capitalism 2.0: new horizons for managers”. More than 300 participants from more than 30 countries around the world, led by some of the leading management thinkers such as Lynda Gratton, Roger Martin and Tammy Erickson, debated the future of management and capitalism. Overall consensus was that the future of re-invented management is here, the paradigm shift is unstoppable and management revolution is gradually gaining a momentum.

 

There is a hope that we can get out of the current economic crisis by embracing emerging management practices based on collaboration, autonomy and decentralization (which were all promoted by Peter Drucker), and by changing a mindset from the one that focuses on personal gratification to another that seeks to find a deeper meaning of work that is greater than any individual aspirations, and that is focused on making a positive difference for individuals, organisations and society.

 

In my own endeavour to make this world a better place, I have founded the Drucker Society London, one of the twenty Drucker Societies operating around the world. The aim of the Drucker Society London is to promote responsible management practices based on Peter Drucker’s ideas. One of our core activities is to teach young people self-management and entrepreneurial skills based on the Drucker’s Future Leaders Programme. I am delighted that we plan to teach workshops based on this Programme to WBS undergraduate students as a part of Employability module sometime next year.

 

If anyone would like to join the Drucker Society London and help us to make a difference for the future generations please contact me on hlupicv@wmin.ac.uk.
Professor Vlatka Hlupic

 


 

This post was first published on http://blog.business.westminster.ac.uk

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Capitalism 2.0 Grapples With Youth Unemployment by Elizabeth Haas Edersheim http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=284 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=284#respond Wed, 28 Nov 2012 05:00:46 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=284 The Drucker Global Forum, held this month in Vienna, engaged more than three hundred people in envisioning Capitalism 2.0, redefining roles, responsibilities, and management to better address the 21st century. By the end, I felt more optimistic about business and social enterprises than I ever have.

 

We pondered the basic question that Peter Ducker often asked when he worked with managers: “What is needed?” And we took on the tougher question that Drucker used to close every conversation: “What are we going to do about it?”

 

What is needed?

 

No matter what their ages or backgrounds, participants agreed that the foremost challenge around the globe is youth unemployment.

 

Lynda Gratton  of the London School of Economics  arrived in Vienna from the World Economic Forum in Dubai, where experts  warned of daunting jobless numbers. “If you have youthful unemployment in Spain or Greece  rapidly coming north of 40 or 50 percent,” Gratton said, “there is unrest.”

 

We can prattle on about the spread of democracy in the world, but if we don’t address youth unemployment, democracy will retrench.   Indeed, we risk more autocracies and extremist governments to deal with the rising tide of disaffected teens and 20-somethings.

 

Paul Polman, CEO of Unilever, described witnessing a haunting scene upon returning to Newcastle, a city built on steel and coal:  “For the first time in my life, I saw second-generation unemployment.” He explained that this generation of young people had never seen their parents work. In fact, the only path out of misery they could see was having a baby – because that, at least, seemed a tangible possession.  Yet as young, jobless parents, they found themselves further mired in poverty.

 

“That galvanized me to do something more than have a brilliant career and make a lot of money,” Polman said. The challenge, he conceded, is enormous.

 

The angst of  young people was evident in the forum’s annual  student essay competition.   Of the 101 essays submitted, more than 90 focused on the lack of jobs.  Most also called on the youth themselves to invent jobs and start businesses, yet  lamented that such skills aren’t valued by their parents or taught in school.

 

All across the conference center, in a babble of English, German, Mandarin, Korean and other languages, participants grappled with the implications of youth unemployment.  The biggest issue the world faces now is not sustainable growth, the troubles with the euro, or indebted countries with no reserves. It is the rift between the youth and the rest of society, which stands to tear apart the social fabric.  And we have no solutions, not even realistic hypotheses for ending the unemployment of the next generation.

 

Ironically, this is the same issue Peter Drucker wrote about in his first book, The End of Economic Man –  the issue he credited with enabling Hitler’s  rise to power.

 

 

What are we going to do about it?

 

Creative thinkers and doers—from chief executive officers of multinationals to unknown masters of start-ups, from students to social enterprise champions—proposed solutions in Vienna. There was a resolute sense of “we” in every conversation. Again and again, they called for abandoning  tired traditions and charting new ways.

 

The large corporate CEO:  On his first day as Unilever’s CEO, Paul Polman stopped quarterly reporting to analysts.   That may sound counter-intuitive for one of the world’s leading publicly-held companies – one that is beholden to shareholders – but Polman  wanted to send a strong signal about priorities.

 

“I have better things to do with my time than report every 76 days about the weather impact, et cetera,” he said. Unilever has set as its goal doubling revenue and halving its carbon footprint over the next five years. The two are working together. Unilever has been able to modify its outdated, bulky pension system to invest money in youth training and cross-internships with not-for profits including Oxfam and  Forum for the Future, and so on.  Unilever also started an apprenticeship program based on the German model, offering a combination of jobs and training.

 

The result? Young people are learning from internships, apprenticeships, and training programs, positioning themselves to participate in the business world. Stockholders are having conversations about the long-term, for the company and for society. And consumers like what Unilever is doing and are buying more products.

 

Martin Curley, director of Intel Labs Europe, described the impact of opening Intel’s  innovation process to universities and other companies:  “When we let youth participate, they not only gain experience interacting with a corporate organization but also have an impact on results.” This more open innovation process with student input drove growth at what had been a flat company for years.

 

Social entrepreneurs. Bill Liao was one of many social entrepreneurs who spoke passionately about how people around the world are using well-crafted business practices as a force for good. For example, there’s a need for talented computer coders. One of Liao’s firm’s projects, named CoderDojo, is a movement that enlists volunteers to teach children to understand computers and code.

 

Since coding is a language skill, children who learn early become what Liao dubs “coder poets,”  who can get more impact from fewer lines of code. Society gains adept, top-notch coders, and the children gain a foundation for marketable skills. “Everything is free on every level,” Liao marveled.  “We don’t work for money, we work for impact, and it works!”  He’s not kidding.  Because CoderDojo is a movement without administrative fees, salaries, or costs of any kind, it doesn’t even have a bank account.

 

Academics. Nobel Laureate Dan Schectman of Technion Israel Institute called for sophisticated training to start early. He teaches kindergarten students physics:“This is the age they can learn. This is a language they understand and will grow with them.” He also teaches engineering students entrepreneurship—a class that is continually over-enrolled.  He talked about the need for entrepreneurs to recognize that ideas are not enough—they need to be managed.  He is helping kids be entrepreneurs and job creators.

 

Startups. Speakers talked of startups building businesses, all on the new model of cross-organization resources seeking high impact.   For example, Etventures is a place for large corporations to take their ideas to be nurtured and built up as innovations.  Qwalify is a site for individuals to find their strengths and be matched with organizations that need those skills – a matchmaker for employees and employers. Young thinkers are powering these developments, and every success grows the economy and the employment base.

 

Engaged citizens. Citizens, led by the young, are playing vital roles in creating   social change, such as fighting corruption.  They’re harnessing the transparency offered by the web and social media. John Quelch described a video of a man destroying his defective refrigerator, which has been seen 170 million times in China. He spoke of a fatal train derailment that could not be obfuscated by the authorities because images went viral on YouTube. Efforts like this motivate young people to participate in organizational life and sharpen practical skills.

 

Consultant Tammy Ericson described how, in these times, everything is visible to everyone, which brings to mind another Drucker quote:  “I just look out the window and see what is visible—but not yet seen.”

 

What is visible but not yet seen is the power of ordinary Chinese college students to thwart corruption. . . of young entrepreneurs crossing organizational boundaries and building bridges to what used to be unimaginable. . .  In short, organizations and citizens, young and old, are creating a new social contract, which will form the basis of Capitalism 2.0.

 

AUTHOR:

Elizabeth Haas Edersheim , author and consultant, is founder of NYCP – a management lab –  and architect of The Elements of Management Effectiveness, ThEME, available as an iPad app and in a customized version reflecting quotes and ideas from the Forum .  She worked with Peter Drucker in the last years of his life and authored The Definitive Drucker

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Mobilizing Intelligence: Three Lessons From the Drucker Forum in Vienna by Rick Wartzman http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=274 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=274#respond Wed, 21 Nov 2012 05:05:03 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=274 During a visit last week to the place of Peter Drucker’s birth, I suddenly remembered a note that he had written shortly before his death.

 

I had come to Vienna to participate in the Fourth Global Peter Drucker Forum, which attracted hundreds of executives, scholars and students to contemplate what, in the aftermath of the global financial crisis and Great Recession, a better form of capitalism might look like. Much of the discussion on “Capitalism 2.0” centered, sensibly, on finding alternatives to maximizing shareholder value.

 

But other important threads also ran through the proceedings, including the way that information technology is reshaping all sorts of organizations. It was this particular theme that prompted me to flash on-and laugh about-a brief missive that Drucker sent to a friend in April 2005. “Pardon my ignorance,” he wrote, “but how do you get people to look at the Internet?”

 

The funny part is, as unfamiliar as the then-95-year-old was with exactly how folks maneuvered online, he had spent much of his life exploring and explaining a world that was becoming increasingly dominated by an unending stream of data and knowledge. “The impact of cheap, reliable, fast and universally available information will easily be as great as was the impact of electricity,” Drucker declared in his 1968 book The Age of Discontinuity.

 

Drucker may have been behind in grasping some of the details of technology, but he was incredibly far ahead in discerning the broader contours that most executives are just beginning to see, as evidenced by three insights from the forum:

 

1. Most companies are still stuck in a pre-knowledge-era mindset.

 

“When economists talk of ‘capital’ they rarely include ‘knowledge,’” Drucker wrote in his path-breaking 1959 book Landmarks of Tomorrow. “Yet this is the only real capital today.” As consultant and author Tammy Erickson made clear at the event, most organizations are, more than five decades later, still coming to terms with this reality.

 

“We are moving out of a century in which the key resource that distinguished one’s business was capital-‘those who had money made money,’” Erickson told the audience. “Today we live in a world in which the biggest challenge facing any company and every business leader is to mobilize intelligence.” That, she explained, is the way to offer the customized products and services that consumers now demand; respond quickly to outside changes “through insights gained from faint signals”; innovate; and “harness the smallest units of knowledge, creating value from bits that in the past would have been ignored or discarded.”

 

2. Getting information to flow seamlessly between parts of the organization, as well as between its walls and the outside universe, remains daunting.

 

“How do you prepare leaders to cooperate and coordinate across complex boundaries?” London Business School’s Lynda Gratton asked at the close of her presentation. She noted that while some companies, such as IBM and Infosys, have designed sophisticated platforms to enhance the ability of their people to collaborate easily and often, this continues to be a weak spot for many. In fact, the ability to transcend organizational boundaries is one of four risks (along with the successful application of open innovation, the effective use of social media and intergenerational cohesion) that Gratton’s research has shown corporate leaders are most concerned about these days.

 

Drucker worried about this, too. He called for executives to bring “the meaningful outside” into their organizations. Internally, meanwhile, “all the managers in a plant will have to know and understand the entire process, just as the destroyer commander had to know and understand the tactical command of the entire flotilla,” Drucker wrote in Managing for the Future, published in 1992. They will “have to think and act as team members, mindful of the performance of the whole. Above all, they will have to ask: ‘What do the people running the other modules need to know about the characteristics, the capacity, the plans and the performance of my unit? And what, in turn, do we in my module need to know about theirs?’”

 

3. Don’t underestimate what can be done when people have vital information in their hands.

 

“Whoever has the information has the power,” Drucker wrote in his 2002 book Managing in the Next Society. “Power is thus shifting to the customer.”

 

In the U.S., at least, Best Buy has become the poster child for this dramatic transformation. But to really comprehend how far-reaching its effects can be, we should all be looking toward China, where 530 million people are now connected to the Internet and half of those use social media every day.

 

John Quelch, of the China Europe International Business School, told Drucker forum attendees how one blogger last year put a dent in Siemens’s reputation after the company failed to respond adequately to complaints about refrigerators with a faulty door. The blogger, Luo Yonghao, and friends sledgehammered several of the products in front of the company’s offices in Beijing-all of it caught on video. Their efforts went viral, and Siemens wound up apologizing. At the same time, other Chinese have self-organized online to form purchasing groups with enough leverage to force down the price of, say, the new Toyota Yaris they each want to buy.

 

“In the absence of strong legal and consumer protection systems, social media protect the interests of ordinary people, facilitate competitive pricing through e-commerce and enable emerging as well as established brands to thrive,” Quelch remarked.

 

Whether this consumer power can stretch into citizen power is an open question. Drucker, though, wouldn’t have been surprised if it does. E-commerce is “profoundly changing economies, markets and industry structures,” he wrote in The Atlantic in 1999. “But the impact may be even greater on societies and politics and . . . on the way we see the world and ourselves in it.”

 

For hundreds of millions of Chinese, the information revolution may truly live up to its name.

 

AUTHOR:
Rick Wartzman is the executive director of the Drucker Institute at Claremont Graduate University and a columnist for Forbes.com. He is the author of What Would Drucker Do Now? (which is a collection of his columns) and two books of narrative history: Obscene in the Extreme: The Burning and Banning of John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath and (with Mark Arax) The King of California: J.G. Boswell and the Making of a Secret American History.

 


 

This post was first published on www.forbes.com.

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Why Management 2.0 Is Inevitable by Steve Denning http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=246 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=246#respond Wed, 14 Nov 2012 05:00:52 +0000 http://www.druckerforum.org/blog/?p=246 In my post, “The Revolutionary Tenets of Management 2.0”, I described five fundamental shifts that firms must master to navigate the transition to the new management ecosystem of Management 2.0.

 

In my TEDx talk in Oslo last month, I explained in more detail why the transition to Management 2.0 is not merely desirable: it is inevitable.

 

In the talk, I examine the epic shift in power in the marketplace from the seller to the buyer, that flows from Peter Drucker’s foundational insight in 1973: “There is only one valid definition of business purpose: to create a customer.”

 

The shift in power has had devastating consequences for hierarchical bureaucracies, which have been insufficiently agile to cope with the more dynamic marketplace. They have experienced steadily decreasing returns on their assets and on invested capital.

 

By contrast, firms such as Apple [AAPL] and Salesforce [CRM] that have focused totally on delighting the customer have been hugely profitable.

 

Management 2.0 amounts to a paradigm shift in the strict sense of the phrase as used by Thomas Kuhn: a new mental model of the world and how management operates within it.

 

Because it generates markedly superior profitability as well as a more satisfying workplace and a more congenial experience for customers, the question is not whether it will happen, but when.

 

A full transcript of the talk is available here.


AUTHOR:
Steve Denning’s latest book is The Leader’s Guide to Radical Management (Jossey-Bass, 2010). It describes management principles and practices required to reinvent management to promote innovation and adaptation. He is also the author of The Leader’s Guide to Storytelling (2011) and The Secret Language of Leadership (2007). His website is www.stevedenning.com and his Forbes column on radical management is at http://blogs.forbes.com/stevedenning/.

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