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This link has been bookmarked by 11 people . It was first bookmarked on 27 Jun 2009, by Free Dude.

  • 30 Jun 09
  • 29 Jun 09
    • the industrial age mindset of logic, certainty and bounded constraints to the network gestalt of interaction, self-organization, unpredictability and fewer limits to potential
    • In the network era, things you can’t see are more valuable than things you can.
    • 4 more annotations...
  • bertrandduperrin
    Bertrand Duperrin

    Today’s networked era requires a new way to make investment decisions that incorporates intangible assets and more accurately depicts how value is created.

    The industrial age has run out of steam. Look at General Motors. Look at Chrysler. We are witnessing the death throes of management models that have outlived their usefulness.

    The network era now replacing the industrial age holds great promise. Networked organizations are reaping rewards for connecting people, know-how and ideas at an ever-faster pace. Value creation has migrated from what we can see (physical assets) to intangibles (ideas). Look at Google and Cisco.

    networks socialnetworks ROI organization productivity ROII interactions judgment

    • ROI is an accounting and financial management concept businesses use to decide where to make investments and to assess the success of investment decisions after the fact. ROI reduces both return — R, what you expect back — and investment — I, what you expect to put in to numbers — making it possible to compare one investment opportunity to another. The numbers tie back to categories on the balance sheet and income statement, (i.e. tangible assets and hard-dollar returns).
    • Measuring intangibles involves making judgment calls, so managers often exclude intangibles from their ROI calculations. Several purported authorities on calculating ROI suggest taking intangibles into account by putting them on a list but refusing to estimate their value. This leads you to comparing numbers to words, apples to oranges. 
    • 1 more annotations...
  • 28 Jun 09
    blairteach
    Nancy Blair

    You Must Manage What You Can’t Measure 

    “You can’t manage what you can’t measure” was a mantra of industrial age management. Adopting F.W. Taylor’s brilliant research and models, generations of managers have carried stopwatches and pored over measurements in a continual quest to make things work better. Efficiency was the road to riches in the slower-moving, predictable industrial age, and measurement was the proof of the pudding. �
    While the measurement meme works when your goal is to tweak the way you’ve been doing things and other operational decisions, it doesn’t apply to making judgment calls, strategic choices or disruptive innovations.
    Executives manage immeasurable things all the time. The more powerful the executive, the more likely he or she is involved in effectiveness — doing the right things rather than doing things right. Intuition, judgment and gut feelings guide these more important decisions. Qualitative assessment often can make up for a concrete numeric result.
    Make a hypothesis of cause and effect. Interview a statistically significant sample of the workforce to see if the hypothesis holds up. Often, results obtained from social science research methods will produce more meaningful feedback than solid counts of the wrong thing.
    The old “can’t measure, can’t manage” dodge doesn’t free businesspeople from making decisions under conditions of uncertainty, and the network era ushers in uncertainty in spades.

    assessment measurement management

  • 27 Jun 09
    freedude
    Free Dude

    Social architecture for wired organizations