Organizational Effectiveness

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The more things change …

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Imagine a map. Imagine yourself folding the map.
Now imagine an economist who, seeing the crease, complains about the canyon you just dug in the middle of someone’s corn field.
The actual headline read “Shocking New Accounting Rules.” Published in The Economist (8/19/2010), which really should know better, it explains that IASB (the International Accounting Standards Board) [...]

Departure tales

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

This is a tale of three departures and their lessons for IT leaders.
Departure #1 is Steven Slater. In case you’ve been living in a cave, Slater, a JetBlue flight attendant, experienced an intense customer relationship opportunity with a passenger who retrieved her luggage before the plane reached the gate.
That’s when Slater achieved greatness:

Measure? If you can’t predict you can’t manage

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Imagine Pacioli took a different tack.
You remember Pacioli. Italian guy. A friar. Invented modern accounting five centuries ago, give or take a few years. Ring a bell?
We still keep the books the Pacioli way. It’s why, when you buy a computer, you credit cash and debit tangible assets but when you train an employee you [...]

Managing to the numbers

Monday, August 9th, 2010

The problem with managing to the numbers is that it doesn’t work. Far too many of those who think having an equity stake in a business qualifies them to run it, is that they think it does.
They are, in a word, naïfs, and in another word, arrogant. Bad combination.
Understanding that the plural of anecdote isn’t [...]

Apples and whoozits?

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

Apple’s profit line has beaten Microsoft’s profit line.
It’s an occasion whose importance rivals one of a bygone era: The day the “Whopper beat the Big Mac,” back when the burger wars were upon us.
Comparing very much of anything having to do with Apple to anything having to do with Microsoft is about as sensible as [...]

A $575 trillion lesson in IT governance

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Are we serious?
Total global wealth stands at $125 trillion, more or less. The total world market for financial derivatives stands at $700 trillion. Does anyone else see something terribly wrong with this picture?
I’m hesitant to form a Strongly Held Opinion about complex matters I only dimly understand. So it’s with some trepidation that I ask [...]

IT management’s patriotic duty

Monday, July 5th, 2010

It’s time for a few I-told-you-so’s (ITYS), some industry commentary, public policy ramblings, and just connection to IT leadership to justify the rest.
ITYS #1: In his Fatal Exception blog, InfoWorld’s Neil McAllister asks, “Is the SaaS experiment finally over?” (7/1/2010). Citing Gartner, which elsewhere continues to cheerlead Software as a Service, he points out that [...]

Preventing strongly held opinions

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Today’s KJR is “Based on a True Story.”
Which, if I worked in the movie industry, would mean it’s a work of complete fiction. Congress should form a regulatory agency to evaluate all claims of true-story-ness. It could provide a rating system, ranging from VA-90 (Verified 90+% accurate) to AP-10 (the names of fewer than 10% [...]

A good leadership lesson from very bad leadership

Monday, June 21st, 2010

BP’s new strategy: Tony Hayward isn’t gone, but they’re hoping he will be forgotten. Chairman of the board Carl-Henric Svanberg decided Hayward shouldn’t be turned into one of the small people just yet, because his primary sin was his impact on BP’s image.
Which tells me neither Hayward nor Svanberg has spent much time shopping at [...]

The fifth response to risk

Monday, June 14th, 2010

We need to add a response.
The risk management profession lists four ways to deal with risk. There’s:

Prevention (which can mean reducing the odds of an occurrence as well as eliminating them) …

Mitigation, limiting the damage that occurs should the risk turn into reality …

Insurance, spreading the cost of any damage that occurs …

… and, [...]

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my photoBob Lewis is president of IT Catalysts, Inc., a consultancy specializing in IT organizational effectiveness and strategic integration. He has published these columns once a week in one form or another since 1996.

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