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    <h1>Curiouser and Curiouser!</h1>
    <em>'Where shall I begin, please your Majesty?' He asked. 'Begin at the beginning,'
the King said, very gravely, 'and go on till you come to the end: then stop.'</em>
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<p><strong>About</strong></p>

<p>Wherein Matt Mower (aka rubymatt on FreeNode) rambles about technology, the love of a good MacTop, ruby coding, rails, topics, knowledge management and learning, and politics.</p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Jun 2003 11:12:12 +0100</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;I've never heard Dave Snowden speak before so I was excited to finally get a chance and he did not disappoint.&amp;nbsp; His good reputation is certainly well earned;&amp;nbsp;Normally the idea of listening to someone speak for 90 minutes at a conference would fill me with icy dread but Dave held us spellbound as he wove ideas around us faster and faster.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;He's been described as a 'radical Welsh philosopher' which is a label he warms to, he revels in the ancient celtish practice of ribbing the English.&amp;nbsp; Nevertheless there is no shortage of&amp;nbsp;philosophical underpinning to what follows.&amp;nbsp; Please also note that this isn't a literal transcription, I may have inadvertently introduced errors or changes of meaning.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;H3&gt;Cynicism and Serendipity: A just in time approach to KM&lt;/H3&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The basis of successful KM is an understanding of philosophy and cognitive psychology.&amp;nbsp; More important than computer&amp;nbsp;science or business management which he describes as&amp;nbsp;dead disciplines.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Understanding of human nature is the gateway to the future.&amp;nbsp; "Re-establishing the importance of human beings."&amp;nbsp; He describes himself as an optimist and sees that, whilst there is a long way to go, things are moving in the right direction.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Dave described a little of the adventure behind the founding of the Cynefin centre and how, at times, IBM execs had tried to have him and his group thrown out of the company.&amp;nbsp; But he also said that, paradoxically, it can be much easier to innovate in large companies like IBM because there is no tight management.&amp;nbsp; You can often hide your project away by not arguing with the processes and justing getting on with things 'fying under the radar.'&amp;nbsp; Getting funding and agreement whilst operating this way requires a lot of human knowledge.&amp;nbsp; He said that John Pointdexter spoke of IBM as making the government look beauracracy free.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;However from nearly being thrown out they had worked to get to the position of being asked to train IBM's top 100 in a new initiative.&amp;nbsp; This lead to a joint project between IBM and the University of Cardiff and the founding of the Cynefin centre.&amp;nbsp; Dave was very enthusiastic about this development seeing an opportunity to bridge the divide between academics and practitioners.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Moving on to the subject of their work Dave suggests there is a lot of confusion of properties with qualities.&amp;nbsp; The typical behaviour of management consultants is to attempt to generalise from a hypothesis about&amp;nbsp;company behaviour:&amp;nbsp; e.g.&amp;nbsp;successful companies have 'flat management structure' ergo flat management structure leads to success.&amp;nbsp; Dave suggests this is logically incoherent that it is like a man who steps off a boat in France and see's that everyone is wearing glasses.&amp;nbsp; He assumes that all French men wear glasses.&amp;nbsp; The management consultants then go on to assume that wearing glasses will make you French!&amp;nbsp; Life is more complex than this.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Next Dave suggested banning of the term "best practice".&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; He went on to suggest that best practice is past practice, and usually a bad thing in a fast changing environment.&amp;nbsp; He also lamented the way Government keeps copying industry when the forces at work are completely different.&amp;nbsp; Without the profit motive there is no pressure to force things that don't work out of the system, and many of these things are incompatible with the service culture.&amp;nbsp; Why does it happen anyway?&amp;nbsp; Why does government keep taking up things which industry has abandoned as useless?&amp;nbsp; (E.g. balanced score card).&amp;nbsp; He suggests that consultants who have learned that business won't buy their methods look around for some poor dupe and government is it!&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;At this point Dave said something that really resonated with me and the work that Paolo and I are doing:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;UL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;Major consultancies know that knowledge transfers through informal networks!&lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/UL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;About the name Cynefin (pronounced kin-nev-in):&amp;nbsp; They choose the word from a&amp;nbsp;"Language that only a few other million gifted people speaks" because it's meaning was less likely to be overloaded and confused.&amp;nbsp; Literally translated it means 'habitat' or&amp;nbsp;'place' however the word has a deeper meaning: 'The place of your multiple belongings.'&amp;nbsp; This is suggestive of the idea of multiple paths which profoundly influence who you are but about which you are only dimly aware &amp; can never hope to fully understand.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; This is reflective of the idea that methods based on predicting the future based upon cause &amp; effect are fundamentally flawed because you are dealing with uncertain pasts.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;There are two schools of management:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;UL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;Technofetishists who believe that people are just there to enter data and that everyone wants to spend their lives in virtual chat rooms. 
&lt;LI&gt;New age fluffy bunnies who believe that&amp;nbsp;technology is the spawn of Satan and that everyone should hug at the beginning of a meeting.&lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/UL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;What is required is a more holistic approach that balances the spiritual with the empirical.&amp;nbsp; This view acknowledges that technology is a useful tool (by which we mean it fits the hand and can be used to do meaningful tasks).&amp;nbsp; But if you have to reengineer your hand to fit the tool then something is wrong.&amp;nbsp; Cynefin is about applying real scientific rigour to soft aspects of organisiations using the new sciences arising&amp;nbsp;from biology &amp; chemistry: complexity and chaos.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It is worth noting that systems thinking,&amp;nbsp;complexity, and&amp;nbsp;Chaos are&amp;nbsp;fundamentally different approaches.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Dave introduces the story of Mulla Nasrudin and the falcon (from&amp;nbsp;&lt;A href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0863040225/ref=sr_aps_books_1_2/202-3393972-6382224"&gt;the exploits of the Incomparable Mulla Nasrudin&lt;/A&gt;).&amp;nbsp; These are&amp;nbsp;Sufi stories.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face="Century Schoolbook"&gt;&lt;I&gt;Nasrudin found a weary falcon sitting one day on his window sill.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face="Century Schoolbook"&gt;&lt;I&gt;He had never seen a bird of this kind before.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face="Century Schoolbook"&gt;&lt;I&gt;"You poor thing," he said, "how ever were you allowed to get into this state?"&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face="Century Schoolbook"&gt;&lt;I&gt;He clipped the falcons talons and cut its beak straight, and trimmed its feathers.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face="Century Schoolbook"&gt;&lt;I&gt;"Now you look more like a bird," said Nasrudin. &lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/BLOCKQUOTE&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The purpose of the story is to highlight what happens in organisations when people are faced with things that they don't understand but need to pay attention to.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;When faced with something successful people want it to look like something familiar.&amp;nbsp; This is a big problem.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Dave claims that &lt;STRONG&gt;worst practice systems&lt;/STRONG&gt; are far more useful than best practice.&amp;nbsp; What spreads fastest: stories of success or stories of failure?&amp;nbsp; Spreading stories of failure is a more important learning exercise.&amp;nbsp; We are &lt;EM&gt;cognitively detruned&lt;/EM&gt; to stories of success.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Best practice doesn't work!&amp;nbsp; As an alternative he suggests that&amp;nbsp;narrative databases create learning environments based upon serendipitous encounter.&amp;nbsp; These spread the net wide to get at experience but are not directive.&amp;nbsp; He asks: Why are we building other types of systems when they do not work?&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The word manage comes from the French meaing 'the ability to ride a horse in a dressage event.'&amp;nbsp; The horse executes perfect movements according to a plan.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Business&amp;nbsp;consultants want to replace the horse with a mechanical horse that can execute these movements even more perfectly.&amp;nbsp; But managing&amp;nbsp;complex knowledge requires disruption of expectations.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;H3&gt;The importance of the difference between categorization &amp; sense making.&lt;/H3&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Q:Why do we do KM?&lt;BR&gt;A: To improve effectiveness of decision making and create conditions for innovation.&amp;nbsp; Hence: action &amp; innovation.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Too many in the field have lost sight of this.&amp;nbsp; Dave says that knowledge management is a transformatory process shifting from Taylorism to the "new age".&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The Cynefin centre looks across all discliplines.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;How do you improve decision making in conditions of extreme uncertainty and change?&amp;nbsp; How do you avoid the talon clipping problem?&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;For 20-30 years we've operated a model of the human brain closer to cybernetics than neuroscience.&amp;nbsp; The assumption is that thought is a logical, rational, linear process.&amp;nbsp; This is &lt;STRONG&gt;wrong&lt;/STRONG&gt;.&amp;nbsp; So is Myers-Briggs and all these other attempts to put people into boxes.&amp;nbsp; It is reminiscent of Brave New World:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"&gt;
&lt;P&gt;"&lt;I&gt;Alpha children wear grey. They work much harder than we do, because they're so frightfully clever. I'm awfully glad I'm a Beta, because I don't work so hard. And then we are much better than the Gammas and Deltas. Gammas are stupid. They all wear green, and Delta children wear khaki. Oh no, I don't want to play with Delta children. And Epsilons are still worse. They're too stupid to be able to read or write. Besides they wear black, which is such a beastly colour. I'm so glad I'm a Beta&lt;/I&gt;." &lt;/P&gt;&lt;/BLOCKQUOTE&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The human brain is adaptive.&amp;nbsp; The way we see the world changes according to context.&amp;nbsp; Disruption changes brain patterns and the key thing in human intelligence is patterns.&amp;nbsp; We match stimulus against patterns to know how to act.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The brain creates patterns.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Hence KM has a problem: We cannot codify patterns for use in text books.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;As proof Dave offers an anecdote about how he met a bunch of macho developers at a seminar who wanted him to come do an intensive week with them.&amp;nbsp; Not wanting to spend a week in the Mid West of America with a bunch of macho developers he said "Okay.&amp;nbsp; It'll be £5,000 a day plus a 1st class air fare."&amp;nbsp; To his horror they agreed.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;During the week he found a lot of resistance to the idea that patterns cannot be codified.&amp;nbsp; So he offered them a challenge:&amp;nbsp; He would take their executive team for a day.&amp;nbsp; If at the end of the day they still didn't believe, he would refund his fee.&amp;nbsp; If they did, they would double it.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;That day he took them to a builders yard set up with a wall that needed plastering and all the correct tools and materials to do the job, along with copies of "10 easy steps to plastering" (an acknowledge good text book).&amp;nbsp; The challenge: Plaster the wall.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Towards the end of the day, when there was more plaster on the them and the ground than on the wall and they were arguing the ethics of bringing in a sanding machine to make the wall flat Dave introduced them to an old guy.&amp;nbsp; In 40 minutes he had a fully flat wall.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;They paid double.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Dave calls Nonaka;&amp;nbsp;&lt;EM&gt;the model that launched a thousand failed KM projects&lt;/EM&gt;.&amp;nbsp; If you imagine you can make tacit knowledge explicit you only have to try the following test.&amp;nbsp; Use Google to translate a paragaph from English =&gt; French =&gt; English =&gt; French =&gt; English.&amp;nbsp; The process of making something explicit loses context.&amp;nbsp; You end up with rubbish.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;"Story virus."&amp;nbsp; Never get a celt angry: Blood unto the 7th generation.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Human knowledge is stored in patterns far more than raw skills and artifacts.&amp;nbsp; Knowledge is in the fingertips and needs to managed in a different way.&amp;nbsp; This is both our power &amp; our downfall.&amp;nbsp; It also means that you can't get knowledge from people by interviewing them because:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;UL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;I only know what I know when I need to know it 
&lt;LI&gt;The way we know things is not the way we think we do things 
&lt;LI&gt;"I know more than I can say.&amp;nbsp; I will always say more than I can write down. 
&lt;LI&gt;Knowledge can only be volunteers it can't be conscripted &lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/UL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;This last is very important because it means that incentives and other attempts to make people share produce the wrong behaviour.&amp;nbsp; People will either camouflage, or dissemble.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;3rd generation approach to KM (Post-SETI - Nonaka) separate knowledge into:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;UL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;context 
&lt;LI&gt;narrative 
&lt;LI&gt;content management&lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/UL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Content: Very high cost associated with proper codifications.&amp;nbsp; Only where it's needed and we have stablity of knowledge.&amp;nbsp; Knowledge goes out of date before you complete the documentation process.&amp;nbsp; (A big problem in government).&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Narrative: What I can speak but not write down.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Context: What I can neither "say down", nor write down.&amp;nbsp; Context is the basis for the success of apprentice schemes and the reason they are being re-introduced (e.g. Cynefin's &lt;EM&gt;IBM Inside&lt;/EM&gt; programme).&amp;nbsp; The&amp;nbsp;most effective way of doing complex knowledge transfer.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;You only qualify once the &lt;EM&gt;master&lt;/EM&gt; agrees you've got it, exams are not enough.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Cynefin is doing work in social network stimulation.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The idea is to design the informal network of an organisation for use in mergers.&amp;nbsp; They have identified that in a merger the the side with the most rigid processes tends to dominate.&amp;nbsp; This is because they tend to have an established beauracracy which can be made common to both sides.&amp;nbsp; This is a bad thing.&amp;nbsp; In the process of the merger informal networks get destroyed.&amp;nbsp; It can takes 4-5 years to build the networks back which is why mergers often fail.&amp;nbsp; The approach is to stimulate the informal network quickly.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;You need all 3 pieces but most current KM are only content management systems.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It's a problem of perspective.&amp;nbsp; When electrons were&amp;nbsp;particles,&amp;nbsp;we looked for particles &amp; found them.&amp;nbsp; When they became waves we looked for waves and found them.&amp;nbsp; In the same way knowledge is paradoxically both a thing and a flow.&amp;nbsp; But content manages only acknowledges flows.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Expertise management systems are effective.&amp;nbsp; Connect people when they need to be connected.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; If we are asked a question about something which we know and care we tend to respond with honesty, some examples:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;UL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;An old friend asks you a question.&amp;nbsp; You understand what they mean by it and how they will understand your answer.&amp;nbsp; Knowledge moves freely. 
&lt;LI&gt;An unknown colleague asks the same question.&amp;nbsp; Normally you will help but you will be inhibited as you consider what they mean and to what end they might put your knowledge. 
&lt;LI&gt;An idiot CKO wants to "know what you know."&lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/UL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Dave thinks that the &lt;EM&gt;knowledge is power&lt;/EM&gt; motive not that strong, fear is much stronger.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;How did KM throw common sense out the window?&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The answers lie in cognitive psychology.&amp;nbsp; Nobody makes rational decisions.&amp;nbsp; What actually happens is&amp;nbsp;a first fit pattern match with previous experience.&amp;nbsp; 2 minutes later you have rationalised it retrospectively.&amp;nbsp; This is a key concept when dealing with complexity.&amp;nbsp; The nature of the decision is a pattern match.&amp;nbsp; Note not best fit, but first fit.&amp;nbsp; What happens when there is&amp;nbsp;no pattern?&amp;nbsp; We hypothesise patterns until we find the first pattern that fits.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;You can see this in the&amp;nbsp;American reactions&amp;nbsp;post 9-11.&amp;nbsp; There were no patterns.&amp;nbsp; Now patterns have been hypothesized.&amp;nbsp; But they are patterns for dealing with the past - the terrorists won't use planes next time.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The stories we develop as children &amp; grow up with are very dominant.&amp;nbsp; Growing up in the 70's you learned that if you didn't occupy the University at least once per term you weren't a real revolutionary.&amp;nbsp; You could differentiate 16 types of marxist.&amp;nbsp; In Washington today anyone slightly to the left of Tony Blair is a raging communist.&amp;nbsp; You can differentiate 16 varieties of the religous right.&amp;nbsp; Patterns are based upon stories which determine how we see things.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;H3&gt;Perspective is vital&lt;/H3&gt;
&lt;P&gt;We all suffer from&amp;nbsp;pattern entrainment.&amp;nbsp; Dave offers up an advert to consider:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;OL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;At first you see a mean looking skin head with a police offer hot on his heels.&amp;nbsp; An obvious thug.&amp;nbsp; What does this suggest to you? 
&lt;LI&gt;Then you see that he is running towards a guy with a briefcase clutched to his chest.&amp;nbsp; Obviously a rent-collector stereotype, the case is full of cash. 
&lt;LI&gt;Finally you see the skinhead pushing the guy out from under a load of falling building materials.&amp;nbsp; Saving his life.&lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/OL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The caption is "For a different perspective, read the Guardian."&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Faced with a thug you don't rationalise, the patterns you have entrained guide you quickly to a decision.&amp;nbsp; This is a big issue in decision theory: "When do you stand still?"&amp;nbsp; "When do you rationalise?"&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Patterns allow faster processing.&amp;nbsp; Human language is not a serial change from animal languages.&amp;nbsp; Dave seemed to reject Chomksky's view that it differs by bigger vocabulary and accumulated complexity.&amp;nbsp; However cognitive science teaches that human beings start with abstractions and then move to the "read world."&amp;nbsp; Human beings are permanatly in a phenomenological state.&amp;nbsp; When the patterns go wrong there is disaster but the next group learns from this.&amp;nbsp; Decision making requires learning about patterns.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It's wrong to take more time to understand patterns.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;How do you tell if someone has winked? or blinked?&amp;nbsp; It's a very important question:&amp;nbsp; In a bar late at night you can get your face slapped.&amp;nbsp; In international dimplomancy is can be the difference between war &amp; peace.&amp;nbsp; In the Cuban missile crisis did Kennedy wink or blink?&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Is behaviour intentional or unintentional.&amp;nbsp; Our assumption tends to be: Other people do things intentionally we do things by&lt;BR&gt;accident.&amp;nbsp; This can lead to creating circumstances you try to avoid.&amp;nbsp; Accidental results of pattern entrainment, not rational intentional acts.&amp;nbsp; This has a huge impact on KM.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Blair can do no wrong.&amp;nbsp; Blair is a spin doctor.&amp;nbsp; Blair is a liar.&amp;nbsp; Patterns.&amp;nbsp; How humans work.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Human beings don't have unitary identity.&amp;nbsp; We are not ants.&amp;nbsp; We all have multiple identities which we move between without thinking about it.&amp;nbsp; This is not a sign of mental illness.&amp;nbsp; It's fundamentally how we work.&amp;nbsp; Dependent upon the context we will see the world a differnet way (father, son, husband, lover).&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Fluid identities, non-rational thinking.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In contrast with current management thinking which assumes rational behaviour and unitary identity.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Strong attractors create patterns around themselves &amp; the patterns create meaning.&amp;nbsp; Gas under pressure, becomes vapour.&amp;nbsp; Then water.&amp;nbsp; This phase shift happens suddenly.&amp;nbsp; Stability. Same thing in human interactions.&amp;nbsp; Not pre-ordained.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;There is a distinction to be made between ordered and unordered systems.&amp;nbsp; Ordered systems lead to targets, optimization and a cause &amp; effect view.&amp;nbsp; Unorder is characterised by possibilities, inconceivability, complex systems.&amp;nbsp; Unorder: "It's order Jim, but not as we know it."&amp;nbsp; Characterized by non-repeating relationships between cause &amp; effect, i.e. things repeat as long as they repeat until they don't.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;These asymmetric collapses create deep shock.&amp;nbsp; However once the phase shift has happened you can't go back - the energy required to return to the original state is too high.&amp;nbsp; Working on the past doesn't work because the patterns have changed.&amp;nbsp; You are learning the wrong lessons.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Terrorists next time they will do something different.&amp;nbsp; Human dynamics: Conflict is critical to detecting weak signals.&amp;nbsp; Without conflict you end up playing &lt;EM&gt;follow the leader &lt;/EM&gt;and destroy the capability for innovation.&amp;nbsp; Unordered systems are matters of managing patterns.&amp;nbsp; This is the key to survival.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Tom stewart:&amp;nbsp;Managing with your gut (Business 2.0)&amp;nbsp; There is a science behind 'gut feel'&amp;nbsp; The way we manage a complex space is the way we manage a party of 12 yr olds.&amp;nbsp; Do you have a process plan and incentive schemes?&amp;nbsp; If you do you're a very sad individual.&amp;nbsp; Instead most people draw a line in the sand "Cross it and die" with multiple interventions to stimulate the creation of beneficial patterns.&amp;nbsp; You manage a complex space by managing the patterns.&amp;nbsp; Create boundaries, do interventions, stimulate attractors.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Not the same as managing order but not abrogating managing.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Disorder:&amp;nbsp; The state of not knowing where you are.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;This leads to the basic Cynefin framework:&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; A sense making framework not a 2x2 consultantany model.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; They did a test with a group of management consultants.&amp;nbsp; They gave them 500 items of which&amp;nbsp;only 200 would fit in the 2x2.&amp;nbsp; The consultants made all of&lt;BR&gt;them fit &lt;STRONG&gt;and believed that they did&lt;/STRONG&gt;.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Category thinking is closed down to new opportunities.&amp;nbsp; Tendencies to categorisation is rigid in management science.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Sensemaking is the process of creating boundaries between things so you can make sense of them.&amp;nbsp; Definied by their own histories and futures.&amp;nbsp; Boundaries emerge from context and are not pre-given.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=16 border=1&gt;
&lt;CAPTION&gt;Domains of order &amp; unorder&lt;/CAPTION&gt;
&lt;TBODY&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TH&gt;Unordered Domains&lt;/TH&gt;
&lt;TH&gt;Ordered Domains&lt;/TH&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Complex: The domain of many possibilities: Cause and effect coherent in retrospect, repeat accidentally.&amp;nbsp; Looks like Empirically knowable from the past.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/TD&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Empirically knowable: The domain of the probable.&amp;nbsp; Cause &amp; effect separated over time but repeat.&amp;nbsp; The domain of experts.&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Chaos; The domain of the inconceivable:&amp;nbsp; No Cause &amp; effect visible.&amp;nbsp; You have to do something.&lt;/TD&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Emperically known.&amp;nbsp; The domain of the actual.&amp;nbsp; The only place where best practice makes sense.&amp;nbsp; Inappropriate in other domains.&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;/TBODY&gt;&lt;/TABLE&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The average life span of a Fortune 500 CEO is now 11 months.&amp;nbsp; When they have been successfully was it what they did?&amp;nbsp; Or did they just get lucky?&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; An interest experiment by spammers:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Take 500,000 email addresses and split them 50/50.&amp;nbsp; To the first 50% claim a stock will go up, the second 50% claim it will go down.&amp;nbsp; Let's say the stock goes up.&amp;nbsp; Ignoring the second 50%, take the first 50% and split them.&amp;nbsp; Repeat the experiment.&amp;nbsp; You eventually end up with a small group who absolutely believe in your ability to predict the stock market:&amp;nbsp;ready to be scammed.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=16 border=1&gt;
&lt;CAPTION&gt;Decision Models&lt;/CAPTION&gt;
&lt;TBODY&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Probe&lt;BR&gt;Sense&lt;BR&gt;Respond&lt;/TD&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Sense&lt;BR&gt;Analyse&lt;BR&gt;Respond&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Act&lt;BR&gt;Sense&lt;BR&gt;Respond&lt;/TD&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Sense&lt;BR&gt;Categorise&lt;BR&gt;Respond&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;/TBODY&gt;&lt;/TABLE&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Understanding the phases is key, knowing whether you are in complexity or chaos.&amp;nbsp; The Cynefin framework leads to you being able to make the right decisions.&amp;nbsp; Many corporations don't understand the unordered domains and treat everything as belonging the ordered domains.&amp;nbsp; This is a disaster as the decision models are completely wrong.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The anti-terrorist problem is the the same as emerging market opportunties from a management perspective.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=16 border=1&gt;
&lt;CAPTION&gt;Network linkages:&lt;/CAPTION&gt;
&lt;TBODY&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Weak central&lt;BR&gt;Strong distributed&lt;/TD&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Strong central&lt;BR&gt;Strong distributed&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
&lt;TR&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Weak central&lt;BR&gt;Weak distributed&lt;/TD&gt;
&lt;TD&gt;Strong central&lt;BR&gt;Weak distributed&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;/TBODY&gt;&lt;/TABLE&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The goal of management is to move from chaos to complexity to the knowable in a watchful fashion by sending out multiple probes and watching the results.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;UL&gt;
&lt;LI&gt;Patterns we don't like disrupt. 
&lt;LI&gt;Patterns we like we reinforce. 
&lt;LI&gt;Shift to the left to exploit it.&lt;/LI&gt;&lt;/UL&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Mathematical approaches to complexity fail.&amp;nbsp; Humans can impose order, ants are condemned to be constantly complex.&amp;nbsp; Shifts to the right are temporary expediencies.&amp;nbsp; Most organisations oscillate between known and knowable.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Creativity is not innovation.&amp;nbsp; Creativity is neither necessary nor sufficient for innovation.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Trust is not a property.&amp;nbsp; It's an emergent property.&amp;nbsp; You can't make people trust each other.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; You can't train people to have qualities.&amp;nbsp; It doesn't work.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;To be useful Communities of Practice require regular sheep dipping into Chaos.&amp;nbsp; A CoP should be destroyed after 12 months.&amp;nbsp; If it's valuable it will go underground and reemerge. Funded CoP's become a huge conservative force.&amp;nbsp; Look at the histroy of science.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Innovation is not a logically planned process.&amp;nbsp; Dipping into chaos to create new complex patterns.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;H3&gt;The Cynefin programme&lt;/H3&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Cynefin dynamics:&amp;nbsp; Innovation cycles.&amp;nbsp; Just-In-Time KM focuses on creating environments that allow complex systems to emerge and move into expert environments.&amp;nbsp; Complex acts of knowing.&amp;nbsp; Rounding level in large organisations is $250M.&amp;nbsp; $49M gets rounded down to 0.&amp;nbsp; A different world!&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Shifting consultancy from a utilization model to a software model.&amp;nbsp; Fed up with teams of consultants.&amp;nbsp; Email detoxification: Cold turkey organisations to get them out of bad email habits.&amp;nbsp;Surving in their own environement represented as a metaphorical model.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Sensing organisational structures which will work post-merger.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Culture. Trust. Collaboration.&amp;nbsp; Big problems that companies have but don't know how to solve.&amp;nbsp; Cynefin will tackle 1 problem per year.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Looking through a complexity lense puts things into a context where you can shift R-&gt;L, from looking at order to unorder.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Western canada is a fabulous example of aborigine integration.&amp;nbsp; Shamans are heart surgeons and nurses.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;PERSPECTIVE. PERSPECTIVE. PERSPECTIVE.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;New patterns emerge from complexity.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Flagship discovery program.&amp;nbsp; A huge mutli cultural experiment.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Corporate values.&amp;nbsp; Rituals in absence of belief.&amp;nbsp; Singing the company song.&amp;nbsp; Create rituals that align people with belief systems.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;I got caught up at the end.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;[I wanted to ask a question about patterns and pattern languages but felt a bit intimidated.]&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Questions: Paradox program.&lt;BR&gt;Questions: Knowledge Audits.&amp;nbsp; Never ask a direct question.&amp;nbsp; Identify knowledge use (decision, judgements, resolutions). Cluster to entities to create a meaningful context.&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;Heuristics are more common than explicit knowledge.&amp;nbsp; What experience is vital to what you do?&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;Create coherent knowledge objects which can be managed and organised to affect core processes &amp; activities.&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;Portofoli of knowledge managament (amortises risky projects in terms of the tangible benefits of low risk activies)&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;2-stage emergence:&amp;nbsp; Dissolve patterns in the spce.&amp;nbsp; Stimulate the space to form new patterns.&amp;nbsp; Rinse &amp; repeat.&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;Never tackle the low hanging fruit in KM.&amp;nbsp; Tackle high vulnerabilit to loss of knowledge areas which core processes depend upon&lt;BR&gt;Questions: &lt;BR&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</description>
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Copyright 2006 Matt Mower -- <a href='http://squib.rubyforge.org/'>Squib</a> Version 0.4.0 (Release 282)&nbsp;&nbsp;Updated: 19/01/2006 18:47
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