Fighting Change, Every Step of the Way - One Man and His Blog

Fighting Change, Every Step of the Way

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Hugh MacLeod absolutely nails one of the biggest problems facing people trying to effect change in big corporations:

Office Life1. "Agents of Calcification". This is a rather snarky term I recently coined to describe the folks in a big company- any big company, not necessarily Microsoft- whose role isn't to invent, make, or sell stuff, but to maintain and enhance the apparatus of bureaucracy, even at the expense of the business itself. Though these agents can serve a legitimate organizational purpose, when any company has too many of these people, you sadly end up with this cartoon [i.e. a "Big Lump o' Death"]. The bigger the company gets, the more energy anybody trying to get anything interesting done will have to spend, trying to navigate around these folk.
I suspect these people are invaluable in good times, keeping the company working efficiently and effectively at what it does best to make money. But at times of great change, they're a problem.

Corporations are, by definition, large organisations. And large organisations tend to develop interest groups whose agendas actually conflict with other, even as each tries to do their best for the company's future. People like Hugh describes occasionally make me want to purchase a large axe and employ it in vigourous meeting room discussion, but, in the end, they are just doing their jobs. It's just a shame that the company they're protecting may be vanishing around them.

Most of the time, I love my job. But once in a while, I suspect it would be easier to get where I'm trying to go by starting somewhere else entirely…

Never mind, I made my choice - and there are more than enough agents of change around me to make it more than worthwhile.

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I just attended a 3-hour talk with the editor of the Spokesman-review. You should have heard his solution to dealing with his most change-resistant editor (I forgot if it was at Spokesman-Review though, have yet to transcribe my 16 pages of notes): he sent her on a 5-week tour across the US to investigate the future of newspapers (mostly to research institutes and think tanks, only one paper as he didn't find newspapers very much in tune with the future). She wrote a book about it and became the most radical agent for change on the paper. You might have heard about their work at Spokesman-Review of course, but it was so many (hundred, thousands, lightyears) away from the reality of Scandinavian media that I found the seminar very inspiring, refreshing etc. And people were very much encouraged to come to Spokane on a study tour...

Dear Karl,

I am now a cynic about online publishing. Please send me on a 5-week tour across the US.

Yours sincerely,

Adam

:)

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This page contains a single entry by Adam Tinworth published on October 2, 2007 10:31 AM.

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