POPULARITY
Ein Einblick hinter die Kulissen mit Kerstin, unserer Assistentin der Geschäftsführung bei Wahnsinn Design.Kerstin ist nun über ein Jahr bei Alex & Chris Wahnsinn Design. Wir sprechen über unseren Alltag. Was bedeutet es eigentlich, ein Design-Mindset nicht nur auf Softwareentwicklung und UX-Design, sondern auch auf Organisation, Führung und Zusammenarbeit anzuwenden?Kerstin teilt ihre Eindrücke von einer Unternehmenskultur, die auf Vertrauen statt Kontrolle setzt, in der Fehlerkultur nicht abschreckt, sondern zum Lernen einlädt – und wo Gestaltung nicht bei digitalen Produkten aufhört. Neben Einblicken in unsere Arbeitsweise sprechen wir auch über Kerstins eigenes Mode-Label k.made und darüber, wie kreatives Arbeiten – ob in der digitalen Produktentwicklung oder an der Nähmaschine – immer mit Haltung beginnt.Mehr über Kerstin und ihr Label k.made: https://www.kmade.de/ Wir hoffen das erste Interview hat Euch gefallen.Kerstin & Chris & Alex (in Gedanken) von https://wahnsinn.design Das ist Besser mit Design, ein Wahnsinn Design PodcastVielen Dank fürs Zuhören
Agilität in Deutschland? Klingt erstmal gut.Fühlt sich aber oft an wie: „Neues Korsett – alte Probleme.“In dieser Folge spreche ich mit Dr. Stephanie Puckett, Organisationspsychologin und Autorin von gleich mehreren Büchern zur agilen Transformation. Gemeinsam sezieren wir, warum viele Unternehmen auf Agilität setzen – und trotzdem keine PS auf die Straße bringen.Du erfährst:✅ Warum psychologische Sicherheit wichtiger ist als das perfekte Framework✅ Weshalb Agilität kein Prozess-, sondern ein Transparenzproblem ist✅ Wie Du die echten Kosten von Transformation erkennst – monetär UND mental✅ Und warum viele „agile Change-Prozesse“ eher Dressur als Empowerment sindReal Talk. Ohne Buzzword-Gelaber. Ohne Dogma.Dafür mit Klartext, Haltung – und einer klaren Vision:Was Agilität in Deutschland WIRKLICH braucht.
Frank Düsterbeck und Sascha Parastandeh über die radikal dezentrale Organisation bei Haier
Frank Düsterbeck und Arne Schröder über Menschen, Potenzialentfaltung und Könnerschaft in agilen Organisationen.
Frank Düsterbeck und Arne Schröder über das Spannungsfeld zwischen agiler Organisation und stabiler Struktur
Na, hat Dich der Titel der Folge auch so getriggert wie mich? Dann darfst Du auf das Interview in dieser Podcast-Folge gespannt sein. Ich spreche mit Christina Grubendorfer über ihr Buch "The Real Book Of Work" und die darin enthaltenen Mythen. Viel Spaß beim Reinhören. Wenn Du Lust hast ein Teil der Scrum Master Journey Community zu werden oder ein anderes Anliegen hast, dann lass uns doch einfach kurz quatschen: https://bookme.name/marcloeffler/lite/15-minutes-strategy-call Wenn Du mehr wissen möchtest, wie Du zu einem erfolgreichen Scrum Master wirst, dann sind die folgenden beiden Links genau das Richtige für Dich: Fallstudie: So wirst Du zum gefragten Scrum Master Infos zur Scrum Master Journey
Summary KeywordsBody, health, stress, day, impact, people, leader, sleep, stress response, eating, carbs, diet, function, drinking, brain, coffee, exercise, affect.IntroductionWelcome to episode 171 of the Enterprise Excellence Podcast. It is a pleasure to have Georgie Lane on the show with us today. Georgie's purpose is to help leaders regain their energy, and confidence and lead to better outcomes. Georgie is a specialist in all things health and wellbeing for leaders. Georgie holds degrees in management and health science. We are together today to discuss the importance of leadership health in leading excellence. Let's get into the episode Georgie thanks for joining us. We are proudly sponsored by S A Partners, a world-leading business transformation consultancy.FREE Download: Georgie's Two-Week Health Challenge!Links: https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/downloads#healthEpisode Links:YoutubeFull episode: https://youtu.be/1JV-9WeM0d4Two-Minute Tip: https://youtu.be/NfxaahMab6oEnterprise Excellence Academyweb: Contacts Brad: Connect via LinkedIn or call him at 0402 448 445 or email bjeavons@iqi.com.au. Visit Georgie Lane on her website: https://www.pranahealth.com.auWhat's next?1. Download the new resources https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/downloads2. Join our next community meeting. https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/community.Listen to another podcast, #70, How to Create an Agile Organisation using Scrum @ Scale, with Jeff Sutherland, Part 1. https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/podcast/episode/4db26ab9/70-how-to-create-an-agile-organisation-using-scrum-scale-with-jeff-sutherland-part-1 To learn more about what we do, visit www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com.Thanks for your time, and thanks for helping to create a better future.
Summary KeywordsOrganisation, work, Lawry, people, leaders, guess, teams, behaviour, understanding, leadership, aligned, influence, talk, create, culture, measure, values, drives, excellence, drivers.IntroductionWelcome to episode 169 of the Enterprise Excellence Podcast. It is a pleasure to have Mr Lawry Scandar on the show with us today. This is one of the best shows I've ever recorded on how to lead excellence and achieve great results. Lawry is drawing from his career at Incitec and working with many other organisations. We speak about how to gain knowledge to lead out and take your organisation to a new level. We will explore leadership values, how to create self-led autonomous teams, shift your culture, and truly take your organisation to another level.We are proudly sponsored by S A Partners, a world-leading business transformation consultancy.FREE DownloadsLinks: https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/downloadsEpisode Links:YoutubeFull episode: Two-Minute Tip: Enterprise Excellence Academyweb: Contacts Brad: Connect via LinkedIn or call him at 0402 448 445 or email bjeavons@iqi.com.au. Visit Lawry at his website: https://lawryscandar.com/What's next?1. Download the new resources https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/downloads2. Join our next community meeting. https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/community.3. Listen to another podcast, #70, How to Create an Agile Organisation using Scrum @ Scale, with Jeff Sutherland, Part 1. https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/podcast/episode/4db26ab9/70-how-to-create-an-agile-organisation-using-scrum-scale-with-jeff-sutherland-part-1To learn more about what we do, visit www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com.Thanks for your time, and thanks for helping to create a better future.
Summary Keywordsagile, lean, tip, customer, modular, dev-ops, amazon, agile mindset, product, scrum, framework, TPS, architecture, world, teams, extreme programming, Gemba, modularity, tech companies.IntroductionWelcome to episode 168 of the Enterprise Excellence Podcast. It is such a pleasure to have Catherine Chabiron and Fabrice Bernhard on the show with us today. Catherine is a board member of the French Lean Institute. Catherine is the former Director of IS Governance at Faurecia, a major French industrial group. Catherine is passionate about helping organisations overcome barriers to establishing hands-on, customer-centric, value-driven prioritisation and employee engagement. Today, We are discussing their new book Learning to Scale at Theodo Group. We are proudly sponsored by S A Partners, a world-leading business transformation consultancy. Episode Links:YoutubeFull episode: https://youtu.be/aTPy77RYO4gTwo-Minute Tip: Enterprise Excellence Academyweb: Contacts Brad: Connect via LinkedIn or call him at 0402 448 445 or email bjeavons@iqi.com.au. Catherine linkedin.com/in/catherine-chabiron-43ba6b16 and Fabrice linkedin.com/in/fabricebernhard are available on LinkedIn.What's next?1. Download the new resources https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/downloads2. Join our next community meeting. https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/community.3. Listen to another podcast, #70, How to Create an Agile Organisation using Scrum @ Scale, with Jeff Sutherland, Part 1. https://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com/podcast/episode/4db26ab9/70-how-to-create-an-agile-organisation-using-scrum-scale-with-jeff-sutherland-part-14. Look up Catherine's new book, Learning to Scale at theODO Group: https://www.amazon.com/Learning-Scale-Theodo-Group-resilient/dp/2958357023 To learn more about what we do, visit www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.com.Thanks for your time, and thanks for helping to create a better future.
Gavin, a seasoned leader with 18 years of experience spearheading medical device development projects. Currently serving as the CTO at Bluedrop Medical, a cutting-edge start-up focused on revolutionizing healthcare, Gavin is at the forefront of developing an innovative solution to monitor the early signs of diabetic foot ulcers.Gavin's wealth of experience extends beyond Bluedrop Medical. As the former CTO of VASGARD Medical, a start-up specialized in electronic wound devices, and a former editor at Medgadget, Gavin brings a diverse perspective to the intersection of technology and healthcare.Gavin's talk is titled “Incubating an agile organisation”. The talk provides an overview of how Bluedrop Medical have leveraged a team-oriented culture to evolve a growing agile organization. It illustrates how a relatively small organization effectively manages a variety of disparate programs across compliance, software development, systems engineering, manufacturing and fundamental research. Find us here: www.agileleanireland.org
In dieser Episode „Müsliriegel“ Podcast teilt Philipp Simanek drei Erfahrungen aus den letzten Wochen. Drei kompakte Impulse zu Führung und Organisation. Future Leadership zum Snacken für zwischendurch. Die nahrhaften Themen: Was transparente Entscheidungsprozesse bewirken können Wie man die Personalentwicklung aus den Elfenbeinturm führt Was er auf der Suche nach Hammerhaien über apolitische Systeme gelernt hat SHOWNOTES: · Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de · Artikel von Philipp Simanek: „Personalentwicklung nützlicher gestalten“: https://intrinsify.de/personalentwicklung-nuetzlicher-gestalten/ · Philipp Simanek auf LinkedIn connecten: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simanek/ · intrinsify Newsletter: https://intrinsify.de/news/ · Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com · Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Eines war bei der Gründung der Software Company AOE klar: Im Unternehmen soll hierarchie-frei gearbeitet werden und es soll auf keinen Fall werden, wie in einem Konzern. Diese Überzeugung ist seit rund 25 Jahren ein Fixstern für AOE. Es waren vor allem die Agilen Prinzipien aus der SCRUM Welt, die halfen, Wertschöpfungs-Teams ohne formale Hierarchien zu etablieren. Es entstand eine kollegiale Leistungskultur mit ausgeprägtem Hang zur regelmäßigen Weiterentwicklung der Organisation. Mit diesem sehr attraktiven Arbeitsumfeld wurde AOE zu einem Vorzeige-Unternehmen der modernen Wirtschaft. Vor vier Jahren kontaktierte AOE intrinsify mit der Anfrage, ob wir uns die aktuelle Organisation anschauen könnten. Möglicherweise gäbe es ja hier und da noch Potential für weitere Optimierungen. Die Struktur- und Kulturmusteranalyse brachte ein spannendes Ergebnis, welches bis heute bei AOE nachwirkt … Im intrinsify Podcast spricht Philipp Simanek mit Daniel Pötzinger, Mitgründer und CTO der AOE GmbH, über 25 Jahre Unternehmensentwicklung, Agile Prinzipien, Partizipations-Theater und New Governance. Über AOE: „Wir sind AOE. Wir entwickeln anspruchsvolle Software-Lösungen, die Wettbewerbsvorteile schaffen. Talente, Technologien und visionäres Denken: Das ist unser Erfolgsrezept, um Unternehmen auf das Unvorhersehbare vorzubereiten und ihr digitales Business-Potenzial zu erschließen.“ SHOWNOTES: intrinsify Newsletter: https://intrinsify.de/news/ Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Website von AOE: https://www.aoe.com Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Adam, Belinda and Sabrina talk about building the agile organisation and reflect on the previous episodes in the season. Team Belinda Price Sabrina C E Bruce Adam Scoot Organizations Agile World Arabica Transformation Consulting #Agile_World #AgileWorld #Agile #AgileTalkShow #AgileManifiesto #AgileCoach #ScrumMaster #Leadership #Agility #AgileOrganisations #leadership #change #transformation #skills #capability #leadershipdevelopment #Arabica Big Thank You to Sabrina C E Bruce Karl A L Smith Agile World ® News and Broadcast Network © 2023 California, USA --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/agile-world/message
Agilität ist heutzutage sehr populär und wird in vielen Bereichen angewendet, nicht nur in der Softwareentwicklung. Allerdings kennen viele Menschen nicht die zugrunde liegende Idee und die Werte, die Agilität ausmachen. Die erklärt Michael Stiller in der heutigen Folge des Podcasts. Michael Stiller hat an der RWTH Aachen am Lehrstuhl für Unternehmenspolitik und Marketing promoviert. Nach Stationen in der Beratung (u.a. Marketing Partners, Simon Kucher) ist er Gründer und Geschäftsführer der Marketing- und Vertriebs-Beratung effektweit und Autor des renommierten Blogs DenkBar. Michael Stiller lebt und arbeitet in Köln.
In der fünften Episode des „Müsliriegel“ Podcast hat Philipp Simanek wieder drei Impulse in einer kompakten Form zusammengetragen. Future Leadership zum Snacken für zwischendurch. Die nahrhaften Themen dieser Episode: Mitarbeiter-Fluktuation ist keine HR-Aufgabe Funktionale Sachlichkeit ermöglicht Fortschritt Kulturbeobachtung während eines Konzerts SHOWNOTES: Kommentare zu dieser Eposode auf LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/simanek_fluktuation-hr-personalmanagement-activity-7067379357907873792-vBEF?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop Mit Philipp Simanek über den neuen Kurs für HR-Leiter:innen sprechen: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Artikel von Mark Poppenborg: „War for Talents“: https://intrinsify.de/fachkraeftemangel/ Artikel von Philipp Simanek: „Fortschritt durch Experimente“: https://intrinsify.de/fortschritt-durch-experimente/ Artikel von Philipp Simanek: „Warum ein Schutzraumprojekt kein Labor ist“: https://intrinsify.de/warum-ein-schutzraumprojekt-kein-labor-ist/ Philipp Simanek zu Gast im Future Fit Company Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5KsyIMMs6NQqqJICga9Ke5 Philipp Simanek auf LinkedIn connecten: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simanek/ intrinsify Newsletter: https://intrinsify.de/news/ Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Die Firma barghorn steht heute für service-orientierten Stahlbau, Maschinenbau und Metallbau. Die über 80-jährige Geschichte war schon immer wechselhaft, aber als mit Gunnar Barghorn die dritte Unternehmergeneration übernahm, kam es zu einem echten Einschnitt. Viele Regeln standen plötzlich Kopf. Gunnar hatte entschieden, das Unternehmen ganz anders zu führen als sein Vater. Er etablierte ein völlig neues Verständnis von Unternehmensführung. Mit Intuition und klarem Denken, getrieben von den eigenen Werten, kam er zu vielen Schlüssen, die wir heute unter dem Begriff Future Leadership zusammenfassen. Er kann von seinen Erfahrungen mit diesem Ansatz aus über 20 Jahren berichten. Dies ist der zweite Teil eines Podcast Gesprächs zwischen Philipp Simanek und Gunnar Barghorn, Geschäftsführer der barghorn GmbH & Co.KG, über Leichtigkeit in der Unternehmensführung, den Umgang mit Existenzängsten und das Fördern der Handlungsfähigkeit auf allen Ebenen der Organisation. Falls Du den ersten Teil des inspirierenden Gesprächs verpasst hast: Gespräch Teil 1 Über barghorn: „Unsere Arbeit hat sich in all den Jahren immer der Technik und den daraus entstehenden Möglichkeiten angepasst. Gleichgeblieben ist jedoch unser ganz besonderer Mix aus Verlässlichkeit und Flexibilität. Für unsere Kunden machen wir wenn nötig auch Handstand in der Nacht – und wir versprechen nichts, was wir nicht auch halten können.“ SHOWNOTES: Teil 1 des Gesprächs: https://intrinsify.de/audio/future-leadership-zwischen-stahl-und-maschinen/ intrinsify Newsletter: https://intrinsify.de/news/ Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Buch von Lars Vollmer „Wie sich Menschen organisieren, wenn ihnen keiner sagt, was sie tun sollen“: https://intrinsify.shop/produkt/wie-sich-menschen-organisieren-wenn-ihnen-keiner-sagt-was-sie-tun-sollen/ Website von barghorn: https://www.barghorn.de Website von Gunnar Barghorn: https://www.humanunternehmer.de Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
SPaMCAST 750 marks the return of Evan Leybourn to the podcast. Evan and I discuss the different domains of business agility, the relationship between behavior and culture, and whether Taylorism still has a place in the world. Evan is the co-founder of the Business Agility Institute; an international membership body to both champion and support the next generation of organizations. Companies that are agile, innovative, and dynamic - perfectly designed to thrive in today's unpredictable markets. Evan is also the author of Directing the Agile Organisation (2012) and #noprojects; a culture of continuous value (2018). Website: https://businessagility.institute/ Re-read Saturday News! This week we tackle Chapter 1 of Team Topologies: Organizing Business And Technology Teams For Fast Flow by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais. The authors open Chapter 1 with a quote from Naomi Stafford, Guide to Organizational Design. “Organizations should be viewed as complex and adaptive organizations rather than mechanistic and linear systems” The quotes set the tone for Team Topologies: Organizing Business And Technology Teams For Fast Flow. Chapter 1 is titled The Problem With Org Charts. In this chapter, the authors point out problems in how organizations describe and organize themselves. Buy a copy and upgrade your coaching skills - Team Topologies: Organizing Business And Technology Teams For Fast Flow Previous Installments: Week 1: Front Matter and Logistics - http://bit.ly/3nHGkW4 Week 2: The Problem With Org Charts - https://bit.ly/3zGGyQf Next SPaMCAST SPaMCAST 751 will feature an essay on the collision of fatalism and privilege. Let's just say…it isn't pretty. Jeremy Berriault will bring his QA Corner to the podcast. Mr. Berriault and I will discuss testing, Quality, and evolving behavior.
Die Firma barghorn steht heute für service-orientierten Stahlbau, Maschinenbau und Metallbau. Die über 80-jährige Geschichte war schon immer wechselhaft, aber als mit Gunnar Barghorn die dritte Unternehmergeneration übernahm, kam es zu einem echten Einschnitt. Viele Regeln standen plötzlich Kopf. Gunnar hatte entschieden, das Unternehmen ganz anders zu führen als sein Vater. Er etablierte ein völlig neues Verständnis von Unternehmensführung. Mit Intuition und klarem Denken, getrieben von den eigenen Werten, kam er zu vielen Schlüssen, die wir heute unter dem Begriff Future Leadership zusammenfassen. Er kann von seinen Erfahrungen mit diesem Ansatz aus über 20 Jahren berichten. In dieser Podcast Episode spricht Philipp Simanek mit Gunnar Barghorn, Geschäftsführer der barghorn GmbH & Co.KG, über den herausfordernden Generationswechsel, jede Menge Management-Irritationen und wie ihm seine persönliche Faulheit beim Erfolg half. Über barghorn: „Unsere Arbeit hat sich in all den Jahren immer der Technik und den daraus entstehenden Möglichkeiten angepasst. Gleichgeblieben ist jedoch unser ganz besonderer Mix aus Verlässlichkeit und Flexibilität. Für unsere Kunden machen wir wenn nötig auch Handstand in der Nacht – und wir versprechen nichts, was wir nicht auch halten können.“ SHOWNOTES: intrinsify Newsletter: https://intrinsify.de/news/ Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Website von barghorn: https://www.barghorn.de Website von Gunnar Barghorn: https://www.humanunternehmer.de Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Andreas Schnabel ist Gründer des Instituts BioLogik, Coach und Referent zum Thema Verhaltensbiologie. Im Podcast sprechen wir über die Wichtigkeit von Aggression für eine gesunde Leistungs- und Innovationskultur, warum Kuschelkulturen langweilig sind und Aggression ohne Bindung wertlos ist.
Die Kreativ- und Organisationsberatung creaffective besteht aus einer Hand voll engagierter Kolleginnen und Kollegen. Und sehr viel größer möchte die Company auch nicht werden. Eine gute Größe, um als eingeschwungenes Team eng zusammen zu arbeiten und gleichzeitig das Unternehmen in den unterschiedlichen Funktionen zu managen. Seit 2015 sammelt creaffective Erfahrungen mit der Anwendung von Praktiken der Selbstorganisation. In dieser Podcast Episode spricht Philipp Simanek mit Daniel Barth, Geschäftsführer der creaffective GmbH, über ihre Erfahrungen mit Konzepten der Selbstorganisation, Formen von Führung und die Rolle des Organisationsdesigners. Über creaffective: „Durch unsere Erfahrungen sprechen wir die Sprache der neuen Arbeit. Wir wirken als Übersetzer und begleiten Sie als Lotsen: Wohin die Reise geht und wie diese aussieht, entwickeln wir gemeinsam auf Augenhöhe. So formen sich mehr und mehr innovative und agile Organisationen und ein aus der Arbeitswelt getriebener gesellschaftlicher Wandel entsteht.“ SHOWNOTES: Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Website von creaffective: https://www.creaffective.de Mark up Podcast: Das Management-System Holacracy im Praxistest: https://workx.libsyn.com/2020/12 Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Bio Evan is the Founder and CEO of the Business Agility Institute; an international membership body to both champion and support the next-generation of organisations. Companies that are agile, innovative and dynamic – perfectly designed to thrive in today's unpredictable markets. His experience while holding senior leadership and board positions in both private industry and government has driven his work in business agility and he regularly speaks on these topics at local and international industry conferences. Interview Highlights 01:10 Nomadic childhood 08:15 Management isn't innate 14:54 Confidence, competency and empathy 21:30 The Business Agility Institute 31:20 #noprojects Social Media/ Websites: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/evanleybourn/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eleybourn Twitter: @eleybourn Websites: o Business Agility Institute https://businessagility.institute/ o The Agile Director (Evan's personal site): https://theagiledirector.com/ Books/ Articles #noprojects: A Culture of Continuous Value by Evan Leybourn and Shane Hastie https://www.amazon.co.uk/noprojects-Culture-Continuous-Value/dp/1387941933 Directing the Agile Organisation: A Lean Approach to Business Management by Evan Leybourn https://www.amazon.co.uk/Directing-Agile-Organisation-approach-management-ebook/dp/B01E8WYTQ6 Out of the Crisis by W. Edwards Deming https://www.amazon.co.uk/Out-Crisis-Press-Edwards-Deming/dp/0262535947 The Goal by Eliyahu Goldratt https://www.amazon.co.uk/Goal-Process-Ongoing-Improvement-ebook/dp/B002LHRM2O Sooner, Safer, Happier by Jonathan Smart, Jane Steel et al https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sooner-Safer-Happier-Antipatterns-Patterns/dp/B08N5G1P6D Dare to Lead by Brene Brown https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dare-Lead-Brave-Conversations-Hearts/dp/1785042149 Article: Evan's Theory of Agile Constraints https://theagiledirector.com/article/2017/04/27/evans-theory-of-agile-constraints/ Episode Transcript Ula Ojiaku (Guest Intro): Hello and welcome to the Agile Innovation Leaders podcast. I'm Ula Ojiaku. On this podcast I speak with world-class leaders and doers about themselves and a variety of topics spanning Agile, Lean Innovation, Business, Leadership and much more – with actionable takeaways for you the listener. Ula Ojiaku I am honoured to have with me Evan Leybourn, he is the founder and CEO of the Business Agility Institute, an international membership body that champions and supports the next generation of organisations. I am really, really pleased to have you here. Thank you for making the time Evan. Evan Leybourn Thank you Ula, I'm looking forward to this. Ula Ojiaku Awesome, now, so I always start with my guests and I'm very curious to know who is Evan and how did you evolve to the Evan we know right now today? Evan Leybourn I suppose that's a long one, isn't it? So I'm Australian, I was born in a small country town in the middle of nowhere, called Armadale, it's about midway between Sydney and Brisbane, about 800 kilometers from both, about 200 kilometers inland, and moved to Sydney when I was fairly young. Now I've spent my entire childhood moving house to house, city to city. So the idea of stability, I suppose, is not something that I ever really had as a child. I'm not saying this is a bad thing. I don't, I had as good as childhood as any, but it's, I love moving, I love new experiences and that's definitely one of the, I think drivers for me in, when I talk about agility, this idea that the world changes around you. I think that a lot of that early childhood just, disruption, has actually put me in a pretty good place to understand and deal with the disruption of the world and then so, well, we've got COVID and everything else right now. So obviously there is a big, there are issues right now, and disruption is the name of the game. I started my career as a techie. I was a systems administrator in Solara Systems, then a programmer, and then a business intelligence data warehousing person. So I've done a lot of that sort of tech space. And, but you mentioned like the Business Agility Institute and this is the organisation I work now, but probably have to go back to 2008 when, I've been using agile, capital A agile, Scrum and XP, primarily a little bit of FDD in a data warehousing business intelligence space. And in 2008, I got promoted to be an executive in the Australian Public Service. And this was, I think, my first exposure to like, before that I'd run teams, I'd run projects, I knew how to do stuff. And like being a first level leader or project manager, it's, everything is personal. I don't need process, I don't need all those things that make organisations work or not work as the case may be, because when you've got seven people reporting to you, like that's a personal form of management. So when I became a director, this was, I think, my first exposure into just how different the world was when, well the world of business was. And, I'll be blunt, I wasn't a good director. I got the job because I knew what to do. I knew how to, like, I could communicate in the interview how to like, build this whole of governments program, and that isn't enough. I had this assumption that because I was good at X, I would be good at being a leader of X and that's not the case. And so I actually, there's a concept called the Peter principle, being promoted to your level of incompetence. And that was me. I, it's, that's literally, I didn't know what I was doing, and of course, no one likes to admit to themselves that they're a fraud. It took my boss at the time to tell me that I was arrogant, because, and, and that actually hurt because, it's like, I don't see myself as arrogant, it's not part of my mental model of myself. And so, that push, that sort of sharp jab at my ego, at my sense of self was enough to go, hang on, well, actually, maybe I need to look at what it means to be a leader, what it means to create that kind of skillset, and I had this idea at the time that this thing that I'd been doing back as a techie called agile, maybe that might help me with, help me solve the problems I was facing as an executive – coordination, collaboration, not amongst seven people, but amongst like five, six different government agencies where we're trying to build this whole of government program and long story short, it worked. And this was sort of my first ‘aha moment' around what we sort of now would call, or what I would now call business agility, though definitely what I was doing back in 2008 was very, a far cry from what I would think of as good business agility. It was more like agile business, but that's what sort of set me up for the last, almost 15 years of my career and helping and advocating for creating organisations that are customer centric with employee engagement, engaged people, that idea of, we can be better if we have, take these values and these principles that we hold so dear in a technology space and we make that possible, we make that tangible in a business context. So it's a bit rambly, but that's kind of the journey that got me to where I am. Ula Ojiaku Not to me at all. I find it fascinating, you know, hearing people's stories and journeys. Now, there's something you said about, you know, you, weren't a good director, you knew how to do the work, but you just didn't know, or you weren't so good at the leadership aspects and then you had a wake up moment when your boss told you, you were coming off as arrogant. Looking back now and knowing what you now know, in hindsight, what do you think where the behaviours you were displaying that whilst it wasn't showing up to you then, but you now know could be misconstrued as arrogance? Evan Leybourn So let me take one step. I will answer your question, but I want to take it one step before that, because I've come to learn that this is a systemic problem. So the first thing, I shouldn't have been given that job, right. Now, do I do a good job? Eventually, yes, and I grew into it, and I'm not saying you need to be an expert in the job before you get it. Learning on the job is a big part of it, but we as a society, see that management is innate. It's something that you have, or you don't, and that's completely wrong. You don't look at a nurse or a doctor or an engineer and think, I can do their job. No, you think if I go to university and train, I can do that job. I don't think we look at a janitor and go, I can do their job without training. And a janitor is going to receive on the job, like it might be a couple of days, but they're going to receive on the job training. There was a study by, I think it was CareerBuilder, 58% of managers receive no training. We just have this assumption that I'm looking at my boss, I can do their job better than them. And maybe you can, but better isn't the same as good. Like, if they've reached their levels in competence, yes, you could probably be better, but not good. And so I think the skills of management are, it's an entirely different skillset to what, the thing that you are managing. And so I was good at, I was Director of Business Intelligence, so I was good at business intelligence, data warehousing systems. I didn't have the skills of management, no, running a thirty-five million dollar P&L, coordinating multiple business units, building out those systems and actually designing the systems that enabled effective outcomes. And so I think, I'm going to touch on two things. The first is, people and I, definitely, should have invested in learning how the skills of management before I became a manager. Not so that you're perfect, not so that you're an expert manager before you start, because you will learn more on the job than you ever will, from anything before you, before you do that job. But I didn't, it's the, I didn't know what I didn't know. I didn't know I was a bad manager. I was completely blind to that fact. I knew that outcomes weren't happening and that I was struggling, but half the time, it's a, why won't people listen to me? Why wouldn't they do what I say? Right, which, okay, yes, definitely not servant leadership material, but I didn't even know servant leadership was a thing. Right, so that's the point. At a minimum, I should have known what it took to be a manager, the skills that were going to be required of me. I should have made some investments in building that before I took that job, which is now the second point as to, they shouldn't have given me the job. And, again, this goes to that systemic problem. I forget who like, there was like a Facebook, like, or a Reddit, like screenshot tweet, meme thing. And I saw it like six or seven years ago, and it stuck with me ever since. It was ‘God save us from confident middle-aged white men'. And I wasn't middle-aged, I was the youngest director in the public service at the time, but I definitely was confident. And for those of you not watching the video, I am white. So, the privilege and the assumption, I carried confidence into the interview, of course I can do the job, I run this team, I know how to do, like I know business intelligence and I know how to design business development systems, and it's like, sure it's a different scale, but it's the same thing. And because I came across as confident, because I thought I could do the job. I thought it was just what I was doing before, plus one, right. But it wasn't, because sure, I could do the plus one part, but that was 30% of the role. I was completely missing everything else. And so that's that other systemic problem, which I have learnt, sadly, over the last decade and a half, in terms of just, we overvalue confidence, then empathy, we overvalue confidence over skill. And I had one, I was empathetic. I didn't have, and, but I was weak at the skills, the management skills, I should have had all three, competence, confidence and empathy, but we value in interviews, as hiring managers, we interview confidence a lot more than the other two. And that is, I think the, one of the real systemic problems we have in the world, especially in tech, but just generally in the world. Ula Ojiaku Awesome. I mean, I was going to ask you, you know, what were those skills, but you've kind of summarised in terms of competence, confidence and empathy. So, well, I'm glad to hear the story had a happier ending, because you definitely changed course. So now knowing, again, what you now know, and you're speaking to Evan of 2008, what are the things, before going for that job, would you have told him to skill up in to be prepared for management? Evan Leybourn So, let me get very specific. So confidence, competence, empathy for me, those are the, so this is something that I came up with, or I don't know where this idea emerged from, it's something that I've carried with me for the better part of a decade. For me, those three attributes are my measures of success. If I can have all three, that's what can make me successful. Now in terms of, going deeper than some of the specific skills that we need, that I needed, so the first one, emotional intelligence. Now, I know that's broad and fuzzy, but there were many times, and many times since I'm not saying I'm perfect and I'm not perfect now. This last week, there have been challenges where it's like I've misobserved, and I wish I had seen that, but being able to understand when you're not hearing somebody, when they're talking to you and you're listening, but not hearing, and so the emotional intelligence to sort of read and understand that there's a gap, there's something missing between what is being said and what is being processed up there in the little grey cells. The other one that, a couple, I'll call it emergent strategy. So, this idea of the three-year plan is completely ridiculous, it's been wrong for 30 years, but we don't develop enough of the counter skill, which is being able to take an uncertain environment, where there's insufficient information and ambiguity, make a decision, but design that decision with feedback loops so that, you know the decision is probably, right, that strategic decision is probably wrong, so rather than sort of run with it for three months and then make another decision, it's designed with these feedback loops, so it's, the next decision is better because you, it's the whole strategic system is designed to create those loops. And that was a key skill that I was missing, in that, this is the government, like I was a Prince 2 Project Manager, an MSP programme manager. I knew how to build the Gantt charts, and I was also an agilest, like I've been doing Scrum for the past five years, but like Scrum at a team level and agility at a business level was not something that many people had even thought about. And so, all of the programme level strategy was not agile. Again, this is 2008, and so we had this, if I had known how to build an emergent, adaptive strategy, a lot of the challenges, the systems level challenges would have been resolved. And I could go a long time, but I'll give you one more. So, I'm going to say communication, but not in the way that I think many people think about it. It's not about like conveying ideas or conveying messages, but it is that empathetic communication. It goes with that emotional intelligence and so forth, but it's the ability to communicate a vision, the ability to communicate an idea, and intent, not just the ability to communicate a fact or a requirement, like those are important too, but I could do those, but I had a large teams of teams across, not all of them reported to me, this was a whole government program. So there were people who reported to the program, but their bosses were in a completely different company, government department to me. And so I needed to learn how to align all of these people towards a common vision, a common goal beyond just a here's your requirements, here's the Gantt chart for the program. Please execute on this 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, right, which, sure, they did, but it's, they would, what's the saying? I think it was Deming, give someone a measurable target and they will destroy the company in order to make it. And you give them these, it's like, they will do like what that Gantt chart says, even if the world changes around them and it's the wrong thing to do, and we know, we've learned a lot better as a world, the idea of program level agility is pretty standard now, but 2008, it definitely, wasn't definitely not in government, definitely not in Australia. So, if I had been able to communicate intent and vision and get them aligned to that vision, and not just aligned to a Gantt chart, we would have been a lot more successful, we'd have a lot more buy-in, a lot more engagement. So, there's more, a lot more, but those would be, I think, some of the three that I would say really, really learn before you get the job. Ula Ojiaku Well, thanks for that. I'd like to just dive in a bit more, because you said something about the designing, you would have benefited if you knew how to design, build and adapt, that adaptive emerging strategy. How do you do that now? What's the process for doing this? Evan Leybourn So let me jump to the present. So, I run the Business Agility Institute. We're a fiercely independent advocacy and research organisation. We've been around for about four years, we don't do consulting, we're funded by our members primarily. Now, one of the very first publications that we put together was something called The Domains of Business Agility. It's not a framework, it doesn't tell you how to do it, it's not like Scrum or SAFe or Beyond Budgeting. Actually, Beyond Budgeting is not quite, if Bjarte heard me call Beyond Budgeting a framework, I'd be in trouble. It's, I think of it, I call it the ‘don't forget' model, because if you're going to change an organisation, these are the domains that you can't forget. The customers at the centre. Around that I would call the relationships, the workforce, your external partners, your vendors and contractors and suppliers, and your Board of Directors, because they represent ownership of the business. Around that are the nine, what I think of as ‘what's domains', right? These are the things that you need to focus on, right, there's leadership domains, individual domains, and so forth. One of them is strategic agility, otherwise known as adaptive strategy or emergent strategy. Now, one of the reasons that is one of the core domains of business agility and has been since 2018, I think, when we first published this, is because this is one of the fundamental capabilities for an organisation to not survive, but to thrive in uncertainty. Now, there are different approaches and, like, there's a whole bunch of different frameworks and approaches to BS, like four quadrant matrixes and tools and canvases. I'm not going to go to any of that, because A, all the tools are fine, right. So, find the one that works for you, Google will be your friend there, but what I want to do is, however, just look at what the characteristics of all those tools, what do they have in common? And I mean, I do that by really telling a little bit of a story. We, one of the things that we run is the Business Agility Conference in New York. It did run every March in New York city until 2020, well actually it ran in 2020. I know the exact date COVID was declared a pandemic because I was literally onstage, because I had to tell our delegates that this was now officially a pandemic, and if you needed to leave early to get flights and so forth, because we had delegates from Denmark and Switzerland, then please feel free to leave and all that kind of thing. Now, this isn't about the conference, but it's about what was happening before the conference. So you had this emergent problem, COVID-19, starting in China, hitting Italy, and I think it was like February 28 or March 1st, thereabouts, the first case hit in America, and it was California, I think it was Orange County, it was the first case. And what happened was we started to see companies change. Now, I describe it, well, sorry, these aren't my words, I'm stealing this from a comic I saw on Facebook at the time, we saw companies responding and companies reacting. Now, this is the difference between strategic agility and non strategic agility. So what was happening, so the first company pulled out from the conference, travel ban, our people can't attend. Within a week we'd lost about 50% of our delegates, right. Now, remember all we know at this point, this isn't the COVID of today, right? All we knew was there was a disease, it was more contagious than the flu, it was deadlier than the flu and it had hit America, right. We didn't know much more than that. We certainly didn't imagine it would be two years later and we're still dealing with it. I remember thinking at the time it's like, all right, we'll have a plan for like September, we'll do something in September, we'll be fine by then, and a famous last words. But companies had to make a decision. Every company didn't have a choice, you were forced to make a decision. Now, the decisions were, like, do I go to a conference or not? Right. Do I ban travel for my employees? Do we work from home? But that decision came later, but there was a first decision to make and, you know what, there's no, there was no difference between companies, those companies that responded and reacted made the first decision the same, right. It's what came next, right. Those companies that were reacting, because every day there was something new that came up, a new piece of information, more infections, a new city, new guidance from the World Health Organisation or the CDC, and companies had to make decisions every single day. And those that were reacting, took the information of the day and made the decision. Those that were responding, took the decision they made yesterday, the new information, looked at the pathway that was emerging, that's that emergent strategy out of it and made the next decision. And so those strategic decisions that they were making as an organisation were built on the ones that came before, rather than discreet decision after decision after decision after decision. And so what ended up happening is you had those companies who were able to build a coherent strategy on insufficient information that grew and adapted and emerged as new information emerged, were better able to respond to the pandemic than those that were chaotically making decisions. And you could see that in something as simple as how quickly they could start working from home, or how quickly they made the decision to work from home, because those that responded, they had this thread of strategy, and so they were able to make the decision to work from home much faster, and then they were able to execute on that much faster. Whereas those that were not, did not. And I think of this as going to the agile gym, or business agility gym, no company was prepared for the pandemic. No company had a strategy paper of, if there's a worldwide pandemic, these are the things that we're going to do. But those companies that have practiced emergent strategy, right, in their product, in how they engage with the marketplace, they'd sort of, they'd taken concepts like lean startup and adopted some of those practices into their organisation. Those who had been to the agile gym, they knew how to respond. They weren't prepared for the scale of pandemic, no one had done emergent strategy at that scale, but they knew, they had the muscle memory, they knew how to do it, and so they just scaled up and operated in that new context. And it's like literally going to the gym, it's, if I build up my muscles, I mean, I definitely don't go to the gym enough, but if I did, right, I could lift more weights. So if a friend goes, hey mate, can you help me move a fridge, right, I'm able to do that because I have the capabilities in my body to do that. If I don't go to the gym, which I don't, not enough, right, and my mate goes, hey, can you help me move a fridge? It's like, I can help, but I'm not going to be that much help. It's, I'll stop it from tilting, right. I'm not going to be the lifter, right. So, the capabilities of that business agility enabled that emergent strategy or the responsiveness during a pandemic, even though no one was prepared for it. And that's kind of really what I see as organisations as they adjust to this new world. Ula Ojiaku Now you have this book, actually you've authored a couple of books at the very least, you know, there's #noprojects – A Culture of Continuous Value and Directing the Agile Organisation: A Lean Approach to Business Management Which one would you want us to discuss? Evan Leybourn So #noprojects is the most recent book, Directing the Agile Organisation is definitely based on my experience, it's drawing upon that experience back in 2008, I started writing it in 2009. It is out of date, the ideas that are in that book are out of date, I wouldn't suggest anyone reads it unless you're more interested in history. There are ideas, so sometimes I'll talk about the difference between business agility and agile business, where business agility is definitely, it's creating this space where things can happen properly through values and culture and practices and processes. But also it's very human, it's very focused on the outcomes, whereas agile business is more, how do we apply Scrum to marketing teams? And so my first book is unfortunately much more agile business than business agility. Ula Ojiaku Okay, so let's go to #noprojects then. There is a quote in a review of the book that says, OK, the metrics by which we have historically defined success are no longer applicable. We need to re-examine how value is delivered in the new economy. What does that mean, what do you mean by that? Evan Leybourn So, the reason I wrote the #noprojects book, and this predates the Institute. So, this is back when I was a consultant. I've run a transformation programme for a large multinational organisation and their project management process was overwhelming. Everything was a project, the way they structured their organisation was that the doers were all contractors or vendors, every employee was a Project Manager. And so what ended up happening was they've got this project management process and it would take, I'm not exaggerating nine months, 300 and something signatures to start a project, even if that project was only like six weeks long. There were cases where the project management cost was seven to eight times the cost of the actual execution. Now that's an extreme case, certainly, and not all were that ratio, but that was kind of the culture of the organisation, and they were doing it to try and manage risk and ensure outcomes, and there's a whole bunch of logical fallacies and business fallacies in that, but that's another matter altogether, but what was happening is they were like, I'm going to focus in on one issue. I said there were many, but one issue was they valued output over outcome. They valued getting a specific piece of work, a work package completed to their desired expectations and they valued that more than the value that that work would produce. And I've seen this in my career for decades, where you'd run a project, again, I used to be a Project Manager, I'm going back like Prince2, you've got this benefits realisation phase at the end of the project. The Project Manager's gone, the project team is gone, the project sponsor is still around, but they're onto whatever's next. Half the time benefits realisation fell to the responsibility of finance to go, okay, did we actually get the value out of that project? And half the time they never did it, in fact more than half the time they never actually did it. It was just a yes, tick. And for those of you who have written business cases, the benefits that you define in the business cases are ridiculous half the time, they pluck it from the air, it's this bloody assumption that, hey, if we do this, it'll be better. I've seen business cases where it's like, we will save $10 million for this organisation by making like page reloads, half a second faster. So every employee will get three minutes back in their day, three minutes times how many employees, times how average salary equals $10 million. It's like how are you going to use that three minutes in some productive way? Is that actually a benefit or are you just trying to upgrade your system, and you're trying to convince finance that they need to let go of the purse strings so that you can do something that you want to do. So if we actually care about the value of things, then we should be structuring the work, not around the outcome, sorry, not around the output, but around the value, we should be incrementally measuring value, we should be measuring the outcome on a regular basis. Agile, we should be delivering frequently, measuring the value, and if we're not achieving the value that we're expecting, well, that's a business decision, right. What do we do with that piece of information? And sometimes it may be continue, because we need to do this, other times it may be, is there a better way to do this? And once you're locked into that traditional project plan, then sure, you might be agile inside the project plan, you might have sprints and Scrum and dev ops and all that kind of stuff, but if you can't change the business rationale as quickly as you can change the technology like the sprint backlog, then what's the point? Ula Ojiaku So you mentioned something and I know that some of the listeners or viewers might be wondering what's business outcome versus output? Can you define that? Evan Leybourn So, there is a definition in the book, which I wrote like six years ago. So I'm going to paraphrase because I don't remember exactly the words that I wrote, but an output is the thing, the product, the tangible elements of what is created, right. In writing a book, the output is the book. In this podcast, the output is the recording, the podcast that we're doing right now, the outcome and the impact is what we want to achieve from it. So, the output of the podcast is we have a recording, but if no one listens to it, then why? The outcome is that, well, the ultimate outcome is changing hearts and minds. Well, at least that's why I'm here. We want to create some kind of change or movements in, well in your case with your listeners, in the case of the book, the readers, we want to create a new capability, a new way of looking at the world, a new way of doing things. And so the outcome is, hopefully measurable, but not always. But it is that goal, that intent. Ula Ojiaku Exactly. So, I mean, for me, outcomes are like, what they find valuable, it's either you're solving and helping them solve a problem or putting them in a position, you know, to get to achieve some gains. Now let's just, are there any other books you might want to recommend to the audience, that have impacted you or influenced you? Evan Leybourn Yep. So I'm going to recommend three books. Two are very old books. So the first book is Deming, or actually anything by Deming, but Out of the Crisis is probably the best one, the first one, otherwise The New Economics. Deming is coming out of lean and manufacturing and the Japanese miracle, but he might've been writing in the eighties, seventies, but it's as agile as it gets, right. His 14 points for managers reads like something that would emerge from the Agile Manifesto, right. So I definitely love, I will go to Deming quite regularly in terms of just great concepts and the articulation of it. The other book that I recommend for the idea, I have to admit it's a bit of a hard read, is The Goal by Eliyahu Goldratt. The Theory of Constraints, and if you Google Evan's Theory of Agile Constraints, and I think we're almost out of time, so I don't really have time to talk about it, but it's the Theory of Constraints, both in a practical sense as to how you actually optimise a process, but it also applies when you're looking at it from a holistic metaphorical standpoint, because I like to say, there is a constraint to agility in your organisation. You're only as agile as your least agile function, and it's not it IT software anymore, it's some other part of your business. You might have a sprint that can create a potentially shippable product increment every two weeks, but if it takes you three months to get a hiring ticket, or nine months get a budget change approved or six weeks to, until the next project control board, you're not, your agility is not measured in weeks. Your agility is still measured in months. Yeah. So Theory of Constraints, the book's a bit hard to read, it's definitely dated, but the concept is so powerful. Evan Leybourn So the last one that I'm going to recommend is, Sooner Safer Happier by Jon Smart. It's a relatively recent book. I, it's the book I've read most recently, which is partly why it's on the top of my mind. It is a very powerful, it really touches to the human sense of agility. It's in the title - Sooner Safer Happier, sooner is a technical value, right. Safer, happier, right? These are more than that, these are human values, these are human benefits. I know I said three, but I'm just going to add a fourth, one more for the road. It comes to what I was talking about early in terms of my own experiences as a leader. And the book didn't exist at the time, but Dare to Lead by Brené Brown. Growth mindset is a bit of a buzzword these days, and there are definitely more mindsets than just growth and fixed. There are different kinds of mindsets that we hold, but just as a way of getting people to understand that you don't have to have all the answers, that you don't have to be right. So the reason I was arrogant, I was called arrogant by my boss at the time was because I didn't have a growth mindset. I didn't know I was wrong, or I didn't know what I didn't know. And it took some poking to make myself realise that I need to open up and I needed to be willing to learn because I didn't have all the answers. And the assumption that as a manager, as a leader, you're meant to have all the answers is a very toxic, cultural, systemic problem. So I think Brené Brown and the growth mindset work Dare to Lead is such a powerful concept that the more we can get people sort of internalising it, the better. Ula Ojiaku So thank you for that. How can the audience engage with you? Where can they find you? Evan Leybourn Yep. So, LinkedIn is probably the easiest way. I'm just Evan Leybourn, I think I'm the only Evan Leybourn on the planet, so I should be fairly easy to find. Otherwise, look at businessagility.institute We have a very comprehensive library of case studies and references, research that we've published, the models, like the domains that we have a new behavioural model that's coming out fairly soon, and you can always reach me through the Business Agility Institute as well. Ula Ojiaku Okay. And for like leaders and organisations that want to engage with the Business Agility Institute, would there be any, are there any options for them, with respect to that? Evan Leybourn So individuals can become individual members, it's 50 bucks a year, that's our COVID pricing. We cut it by 50%, at the beginning of COVID, because a lot of people are losing their jobs and we wanted to make it possible, easier for them to maintain as members. That gives you access to like, full access to everything. We publish books as well, so you can actually download full eBooks of the ones that we've published, and also obviously supports us and helps us grow and helps us keep doing more. We are however primarily funded by our corporate members, so it's what we call journey companies, those companies who are on the journey to business agility. So TD bank and DBS bank, for example, are two of our members, Telstra in Australia. So there is value in corporate membership and I'm not going to do a sales pitch if you are, if you want to know more, reach out to me and I'll definitely give you the sales pitch. Ula Ojiaku Awesome. Well, thank you so much. These will be in the show notes, and I want to say thank you so much, Evan, for making the time for this conversation. I definitely learned a lot and it was a pleasure having you here. Evan Leybourn Thank you. I really appreciate being here. That's all we have for now. Thanks for listening. If you liked this show, do subscribe at www.agileinnovationleaders.com or your favourite podcast provider. Also share with friends and do leave a review on iTunes. This would help others find this show. I'd also love to hear from you, so please drop me an email at ula@agileinnovationleaders.com Take care and God bless!
Zu Gast sind Melanie Deutschmann und Tobias Nehren, OKR Coaches bei Opitz Consulting. Als Teil des Transformationsteams begleiten sie die Einführung des OKR-Rahmenwerks und den Wandel des mittelständischen Beratungs- und Dienstleistungsunternehmens mit 500 Mitarbeitern.
In der vierten Episode „Müsliriegel“ Podcast hat Philipp Simanek wieder drei Impulse in einer kompakten Form zusammengetragen. Future Leadership zum Snacken für zwischendurch. Die nahrhaften Themen dieser Folge: Hörerfrage: Taugt das Modell des Vertrauensdreiecks als Führungsinstrument? Toxische Wirkungen von "Schlaubildern" Ein Beispiel für verzögerte, unbewusste Bewertungen SHOWNOTES: Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de YouTube Video: “Das Vertrauensdreieck“: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9b4wpH-DrJc intrinsify Artikel “Wie Vertrauenskultur gelingt“: https://intrinsify.de/wie-vertrauenskultur-gelingt/ intrinsify Podcast “Vertrauenskultur bei der Beutlhauser-Gruppe“: https://intrinsify.de/audio/wie-vertrauenskultur-gelingt/ Video von Lars Vollmer „Manager sollten nicht authentisch sein“: https://larsvollmer.com/manager-sollten-nicht-authentisch-sein-vgg130/ Philipp Simanek auf LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simanek/ intrinsify Newsletter: https://intrinsify.de/news/ Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Adrian Bischof ist Mitglied der Geschäftsleitung und Partner bei der CSP AG. Nach seinem BWL-Studium an der Universität St. Gallen führte er mehrere Jahre ein Software-Startup und kam 2013 zur CSP. Nebst seiner GL-Tätigkeit mit Schwerpunkt Finanzen und Technologie berät und begleitet er Kunden zu strategischen Themen der digitalen Transformation. Die CSP gehört zu den...
Dies sind die IDEAHEUTE-Nachrichten für Sie. Gerne können Sie IDEA und dieses Format mit einer Spende unterstützen: https://idea.de/spenden.
Das Leitungsteam der Herding GmbH Filtertechnik nutzt seit mehreren Jahren viele Future Leadership Denkwerkzeuge. Das verbesserte die Zusammenarbeit im Leitungsteam und die Innovationskraft der Firma. Zunehmend stellte sich die Frage, wie man Future Leadership Wissen möglichst pragmatisch und handfest unter immer mehr Kolleginnen und Kollegen verbreiten könnte, um noch einen größeren Effekt zu erzielen. In dieser Podcast Episode spricht Philipp Simanek mit Fabian Schünke, Geschäftsführer der Herding Filtertechnik, über ein besonderes Führungshandbuch, den Problemlösungskreis, Entscheidungsgeschwindigkeit, gnadenlose Freiwilligkeit und Endmonster. Kleine Warnung: Es gibt in dieser Episode nicht nur wertvolle, praktische Anregungen. Es wird auch etwas nerdig. Philipp und Fabian tauchen in ein paar Tiefen ab. Und tauchen auch wieder auf. Über Herding: „Herding GmbH Filtertechnik ist Hersteller von Filtermedien, Entstaubungsanlagen und Filteranlagen für die Industrie. In 40 Jahren hat sich der Filterspezialist Herding® Filtertechnik zu einem weltweit agierenden Komplett-Systemlieferanten für die gesamte Industrie entwickelt. Trockenabscheidung, Aerosolabscheidung und Materialrückgewinnung sind Schwerpunkte der Unternehmenstätigkeit.“ SHOWNOTES: Problemlösungskreis auf der intrinsify Podcast-Seite: https://intrinsify.de/audio/future-leadership-ueberall-im-unternehmen-verankern/ intrinsify Podcast mit Fabian Schünke zu Innovation: https://intrinsify.de/audio/strategischer-innovationsprozess/ Buch von Mark Poppenborg: https://intrinsify.shop/produkt/wir-fuehren-anders-24%c2%bd-befreiende-impulse-fuer-manager/ Website von Herding: https://www.herding.de Podcast von Fabian Schünke und Benno Löffler: https://www.primat-der-wertschoepfung.de/podcast/ Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Warum heißt es "Vorgesetzte:r"? Die Organisation von Unternehmen stammt aus dem Militär. In der modernen Welt mit besser gebildeten Arbeitskräften und durchlässigeren Strukturen braucht es aber neue Organisationsmodelle und auch ein anderes Selbstverständnis der Menschen in den Organisationen. Das Buzzword "New Work" kennt inzwischen vermutlich jede:r, doch wie erschaffen wir wirklich neue Arbeitswelten? Guido Fiolka ist Coach für Teams in Unternehmen und anderen Organisationen. Er hilft Führungskräften und Beschäftigten auf dem Weg in eine moderne Welt der flacheren Hierarchien. Kein Wunder: Sein Hintergrund liegt im IT-Umfeld, wo die Agilität quasi geboren wurde. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/imhierundmorgen/message
Klaus Leopold ist Informatiker, Berater und Autor des wunderbaren Buches "Agilität neu denken". Wir sprechen über das Flight Level Modell und wie echte Business Agilität gelingt. Gastgeber Andreas Diehl ist Gründer der digitalen Neuordnung (#DNO), einem Blog und einer Beratung für digitale Unternehmens- und agile Organisationsentwicklung.
Today's host is: Dan Mycek And today's guests are: David Fredh - Product Engineering Director - Verisure Peter Bernhardsson - Engineering Manager - Avanza Andrew Platonov - Product Director - Pandora
In der dritten Episode „Müsliriegel“ Podcast dreht sich alles um Irrungen im Management. Es gibt drei Impulse aus der Beraterpraxis von Philipp Simanek, um trittsichere Wege aus dem Irrgarten des Managements zu finden. Wie immer in sehr kompakter Form. Future Leadership zum Snacken für zwischendurch. Die drei Leitfragen dieser Episode: Wie funktioniert hier das Managementspiel? Wer entscheidet eigentlich was – und wie? Wer ist verantwortlich für die Prioritäten der Mitarbeiter? SHOWNOTES: Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Delegation Poker by Management 3.0: https://management30.com/practice/delegation-poker/ intrinsify Artikel „New Work darf nicht die eine Steuerung durch eine andere ersetzen“: https://intrinsify.de/ein-fallbeispiel-moderner-fuehrung/ intrinsify Artikel „Die rote Falle“: https://intrinsify.de/die-rote-falle/ Philipp Simanek auf LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simanek/ Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Agilität ist ein häufig verwendeter Begriff in der modernen Arbeitswelt. Fast schon ein Buzzword, wie Kritiker sagen. Ist das Thema noch aktuell, ist es gescheitert oder fällt einfach die Umsetzung schwer? Mit Yannik Fleer vom WIBK spreche ich über Kundenzentrierung, Purpose und Ambidextrie in Organisationen. Mehr zu Yannik und dem WIBK findest Du hier: www.linkedin.com/in/yannik-fleer www.wibk.net
Das Feedback zur ersten Episode „Müsliriegel“ Podcast war sehr positiv. Also geht es weiter mit neuen Themen in kompakter Form. In diese Episode packt Philipp Simanek drei nahrhafte Themen: Wofür Führungskräfte Verantwortung tragen Wie Organisationen verblinden Warum Organisationen keine Familien sein sollten SHOWNOTES: Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Gründerszene über McMakler: https://www.businessinsider.de/gruenderszene/business/mcmakler-massenentlassung-nach-firmenfeier-b/ Philipp Simanek auf LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simanek/ Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Die heutige Folge des intrinsify Podcast ist ein Special zum Thema Kultur – und zwar im doppelten Sinne. Ihr hört heute die Audioaufnahme eines Specials unserer intrinsify Academy. Zu Gast habe ich zwei Gäste: Christin Deege, Agile Coach und Organisationsentwicklerin bei der Otto Group und Daniel Ewers, einen Kollegen der intrinsify Beratungstochter Organeers. Wir sprechen über ein mächtiges Kulturanalyse- und Interventionswerkzeug, die so genannten "Verketteten Gespräche". Diese bieten die Möglichkeit substanzielle kulturelle Muster einer Organisation aufzudecken und besprechbar zu machen. Alles über das Werkzeug, was es ausmacht und viele praktische Tipps bekommt ihr in der aktuellen Episode des intrinsify Podcast. SHOWNOTES: Organeers GmbH: https://organeers.com/ Future Leadership – die intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de/ Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de. Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/.
Wir wurden immer wieder gefragt, ob wir auch ein richtig kurzes Podcast-Format anbieten könnten. Future Leadership zum Snacken für zwischendurch. Ein auditiver Müsliriegel zur Führungspraxis. Also haben wir in der Podcast Küche experimentiert und bieten nun eine erste Kompakt-Episode zum Verkosten an. Gleich vorweg: Es wird im intrinsify Podcast auch weiterhin tiefgehende Gespräche mit Unternehmerinnen und Machern interessanter Organisationen geben. Das neue, kompakte Format bieten wir zusätzlich an – wenn es gut ankommt. In die erste Episode packt Philipp Simanek in 17 Minuten drei Themen: Praktische Tipps, wenn die Rufe nach einem Führungsleitbild immer lauter werden Ein Plädoyer für Einzelarbeit Ein kurzer Blick auf Wälder und Selbstorganisation SHOWNOTES: Feedback und Themenwünsche: intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de LinkedIn Post von Neue Narrative: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/neue-narrative_unsere-arbeitswelt-ist-auf-gruppenprozesse-activity-6939493640998141952-iDoP Wohllebens Waldakademie: https://www.wohllebens-waldakademie.de Philipp Simanek auf LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simanek/ Future Leadership in der intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de Organeers Beratung: https://www.organeers.com Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Alexander Ukrow ist Leiter des Nachwuchsleistungszentrums vom VFL Osnabrück. Seit 2014 ist der ehemalige Fußballprofi federführend beim Club von der Bremer Brücke aktiv. In seiner Amtszeit erreichte der VFL den 2-Sterne Status und einige talentierte Spieler und Trainer schafften den Übergang in den Profibereich. Anton Stach, Steffen Tigges, Felix Agu und Daniel Thioune sind nur einige Namen. Beim VFL Osnabrück findet aktuell ein spannender, struktureller Wandel statt und die klassische hierarchische Organisation wurde durch agile Organisationsstrukturen ersetzt. Klingt spannend? Wir reden drüber. Viel Spaß beim Hören! Ihr wollt mehr über den VFL Osnabrück erfahren? Internet: https://www.vfl.de/nlz-orgastruktur/ Ihr wollt mehr über Alexander Ukrow erfahren? LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexander-ukrow-521290200/ Ihr wollt ein professionelles Techniktraining buchen? Dann schaut auf meinen Seiten vorbei und kontaktiert mich. Instagram: MSIndividual Internet: www.m-steffen.com Blog: www.fussballtechnik.com #fussballtraining #techniktraining #vflosnabrück #athlete #training #fussballpodcast #bundesliga #nlz #coach #leistungssportler #bremerbrücke #osnabrück #regionalliga #podcast #2bundesliga
Welche Fragen haben wir behandelt? Was ist der Problemlösungskreis?Gibt es einen Unterschied zwischen Irrtum und Fehler? Wie funktioniert der Modus der absoluten Ablehnung?Wie geht es in der nächsten Staffel weiter?Führung - Fokus - Wertschöpfung: Wir freuen uns auf Eure Anmeldung!
Heute ist erneut Frank Ilg im Podcast zu Gast. Frank ist Head of Innovation, Future Products and Technologies bei der PERI GmbH. PERI ist als Bauzulieferer seit vielen Jahren einer der führenden Hersteller und Anbieter von Schalungs- und Gerüstsystemen. Neben dem 3D Druck von Häusern (s. Episode Teil 1 – "Autoimmuninnovation") bespielt die PERI auch das andere Ende der Innovationsmöglichkeiten im Low Tech Bereich. Wie sie auch in absoluten Entwicklungsregionen, z.B. einem Slum in Nairobi, einen Fuß in die Schalungstür bekommen, das erfährst Du in dieser Folge des intrinsify Podcast. SHOWNOTES: Episode Teil 1 – "Autoimmuninnovation": https://intrinsify.de/audio/autoimmuninnovation/ PERI GMBH: https://www.peri.com/de Twistblocks: https://www.twistblocks.com/ Frank Ilg auf Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/frank-ilg-b3607ab8/ Organeers GmbH: https://organeers.com/ Future Leadership – die intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de/ Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de. Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Heute ist Frank Ilg Elisabeths Gesprächspartner. Frank ist Head of Innovation, Future Products and Technologies bei der PERI GmbH. PERI ist als Bauzulieferer seit vielen Jahren einer der führenden Hersteller und Anbieter von Schalungs- und Gerüstsystemen. Vor kurzem hat die PERI das erste Haus 3D gedruckt. Wie sie diese unglaublich innovative Leistung fernab des Tagesgeschäfts gestemmt haben, das erfährst Du in dieser Folge des intrinsify Podcast. SHOWNOTES: Wir Führen Anders! Party: https://go.infy.link/8DKm Podcast Episode mit Oliver Sowa: https://go.infy.link/8DK- Podcast Episode mit Fabian Schünke: https://go.infy.link/8DL3 PERI GMBH: https://www.peri.com/de Dokumentation: Häuser aus dem Drucker – Revolution auf unseren Baustellen? https://go.infy.link/8DL6 Organeers GmbH: https://organeers.com/ Future Leadership – die intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de/ Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de. Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Welche Fragen haben wir behandelt? Wieso wollten wir, als erfolgreiches Unternehmen, trotzdem Veränderungen vorantreiben? Was waren bzw. sind Hürden und Stolpersteine bei einer Organisationsveränderung, die überwunden werden müssen? Wie empfinden wir diese Veränderungen, wie nehmen wir sie wahr? Wann ist man mit einer Organisationstransformation fertig? Ist man jemals fertig?
Heute spreche ich mit Ruben Gänsler. Ruben hat vor vielen Jahren aus der Frustration seiner Agenturerfahrungen heraus mit 2 weiteren Kollegen die protoype Berlin GmbH gegründet. Heute entwickeln sie als Agentur Apps und zwar sehr erfolgreich, in einer bahnbrechenden Geschwindigkeit und ohne sich die für Agenturen typische Überlastungssituation einzuhandeln. Wie das geht? Das erfährst Du in einer neuen Episode des intrinsify Podcast. SHOWNOTES: prototype Berlin GmbH: https://www.prototype.berlin/ Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de. Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Tonio ist kurz nach der Gründung von Liip im Jahr 2009 zum Unternehmen gestossen. Er ist Mitinhaber und war vor der Einführung von Holacracy 2016 Partner und Mitglied der Geschäftsleitung. Bei Liip engagiert er sich in den Bereichen Product Ownership, Business Development und Beratung. Tonio studierte Betriebswirtschaft und Informatik an der Universität Bern und hat...
Join Murray Robinson and Shane Gibson in a conversation with Jurgen Appelo on how to design an organisation to support self management, continuous innovation and human experience. Jurgens unFix model supports gradual change, dynamic teams, and recognises that managers play an important role. The model is inspired by innovative companies including Haier and Tesla, various agile scaling frameworks, and books such as Team Topologies, Dynamic Reteaming, and Organization Design Listen to the podcast on your favourite podcast app: | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | iHeart Radio | PlayerFM | Amazon Music | Listen Notes | TuneIn | Audible | Connect with Jurgen via Linkedin or https://unfix.work/ Murray via email or Shane in the Twitter-sphere @shagility. The No Nonsense agile Podcast is sponsored by: Simply Magical Data
Die Vier-Tage-Woche kommt - zumindest in Belgien. In Deutschland hingegen hat die verkürzte Arbeitswoche einen schweren Stand: Zu groß sind die Vorbehalte gegenüber diesem Arbeitsmodell. Welche Vorteile die Vier-Tage-Woche hat und wie sie sich in Sven Franzens Unternehmen bereits lange Jahre in der Praxis bewährt hat, erfährst du in dieser Folge.
In dieser Episode ist Paul Rösberg von der RÖSBERG ENGINEERING GmbH zu Gast im intrinsify Podcast. Die RÖSBERG GMBH stellt Software und Engineering Lösungen für die Prozessindustrie her. Mit dem Generationenwechsel in der Geschäftsführung nahm vor zwei Jahren auch ein dynamikrobusteres Organisationsdesign Einzug in die Organisation. Die Folge: Gestiegener Umsatz und gestiegener Ertrag und vor allem eine höhere Innovationskraft. Was genau Paul angestoßen hat erfährst Du in dieser Episode des intrinsify Podcast. SHOWNOTES: RÖSBERG ENGINEERING GMBH: https://roesberg.com/ Organeers GmbH: https://organeers.com/ Future Leadership – die intrinsify Akademie: https://future-leadership.de/ Agile Organisation, Moderne Führung, Hybrides Arbeiten, New Work – das sind Schlagworte, die den turbulenten Wandel der dynamischen Arbeitswelt begleiten, den wir aktuell erleben. Anhand von Beispielen aus der Praxis bekommst Du im intrinsify Podcast Einblicke in spannende Projekte, erfolgreiche Unternehmen und die Gedanken, die sich Entscheiderinnen und Entscheider in dynamikrobusten Organisationen machen. Elisabeth Neuhaus und Philipp Simanek ergänzen die Praxiseinblicke mit Einordnungen, geben Orientierung, differenzieren und liefern praktische Werkzeuge. Ideen und Feedback sehr gern an intrinsifypodcast@intrinsify.de. Du willst keine Folge und auch sonst keine intrinsify Inhalte verpassen? Abonniere den Kanal hier in Deiner Podcast App und den intrinsify Newsletter unter https://intrinsify.de/news/
Sandro Antonello hat Arbeits- und Organisationspsychologie an der Universität Bern studiert. Sandro ist erst vor ein paar Jahren in die spannende Welt der NPOs eingetaucht. Davor war er unter anderem bei Swiss sowie der Schweizerischen Post tätig und befasste sich stark mit Themen rund um Organisationsentwicklung und HR. Schon früh entwickelte er ein grosses Interesse...
In dieser Folge befasst sich Rafael Kasprzak mit Möglichkeiten, mit denen du agiles Arbeiten in deiner Organisation stärken kannst. Es wird die Frage beantwortet, wieso Organisationen überhaupt zunehmend agiler arbeiten (wollen). Um selbst agiler zu werden, erhältst du praktische Ideen, womit du die eigene Arbeit, die Arbeit im Team und in deinen Projekten noch agiler gestalten kannst.
The last two years have seen unprecedented disruption across the world and businesses have had to adapt to survive. In 2017, McKinsey wrote a report called the Five Trademarks of Agile Organisation. Today's guests, Marcia Philpin explains how she adapted the five trademarks and developed the FPM's House of Agile to nurture, sustain, and grow the FPM during the pandemic.Marcia's article can be read at https://mag.nationalhealthexecutive.com/publication/?m=62920&i=683129&p=6. Registration for the IAL's Essence of Leadership Summit is found at https://theial.org/essence-of-leadership-summit/.
Summary KeywordsScrum, people, companies, product owner, faster, agile, scale, organisation, big, building, tesla, toyota, product, decision, s curve, create, real, electricity, Australia.We are proudly sponsored by S A Partners, a world-leading business transformation consultancy.Two-minute TipWell, you know, the big things at Scrum at Scale that make all the difference is we have an Enterprise Action Team, which is the management that is running a Scrum team. It's meeting every 15 minutes every day. Its job is to fix anything that's broken in the organisation, the same day or within a couple of days. That makes all the difference. We start the discussion around that. That's where you see things breaking down. And then, on the prioritisation side, we have this Meta Scrum. You say, people, what is this Meta Scrum? Well, the Meta Scrum is just the management, the product owners getting together and agreeing on implementing the product backlog that they can jointly agree on—and doing an app for the enterprise as a whole. And so the tip I would give is to get those pieces of Scrum at scale running. Key Takeaways1. Analyse what value are you or are you not creatingJeff mentioned that 30% of what most companies are creating delivers no value and could be stopped today. Within the organisations, I visit most people are flat out with not enough time in the day. This is a fast way to bring back focus on time. Jeff's story of what Steve Jobs did focusing the company on the right products and removing others when he came back to Apple as CEO was a great one.2. Increase decision speed.When Jeff mentioned that decision speed is a significant contributor to organisation success, I gained insight. When you are a small start-up organisation, decision speed is extremely fast. As you grow, many aspects of bureaucracy, poor systems and culture creep in that slows decision making speed. Scrum@Scale is a way to retain decision making speed and value focus as you scale.Thanks again for your time and knowledge Jeff, thanks for helping us create a better future.Links Brad is proud to support many Australian businesses. You can find him on LinkedIn here. If you'd like to speak to him about how he can help your business, call him on 0402 448 445 or email bjeavons@iqi.com.au. Our website is www.bradjeavons.com.Jeff can be found on LinkedIn here. Thanks again for your time and knowledge, Jeff. Thanks for helping us create a better future.What next?Listen to our amazing interview with Jeff on his background in #6 The Amazing story of Jeff Sutherland, Agile and Scrum. Or watch #6 with Jeff on Youtube.1. Join our new community, starting in April, 2022. You can start at anytime! Go to https://www.enterpriseexcellencepodcast.comSA Partners
Summary KeywordsScrum, people, companies, product owner, faster, agile, scale, organisation, big, building, Tesla, Toyota, product, decision, 's curve', create, real, electricity, Australia.IntroductionWelcome to episode 70 of the Enterprise Excellence Podcast. It is such a pleasure to have Dr Jeff Sutherland back on the show with us today. Jeff and Ken Schwaber are the founders of Scrum or Agile, as many call it. Jeff is the author of the best selling book Scrum – the art of doing twice the work in half the time and A scrum book, the spirit of the game. Jeff is back on the show with us today to talk about Scaling Scrum and creating an Agile organisation using Scrum@Scale. Jeff has had a fantastic career which you can learn about on Episode 6 of the Podcast. Let's get into the episode. Jeff, thank you so much for joining us again today.We are proudly sponsored by S A Partners, a world-leading business transformation consultancy.EXCITING NEWS!Remember, we are now bringing to the Asia Pacific region the opportunity for you to get trained and certified by Jeff's Agile Education Program and connect to the associated community. Together, we will help our own and others organisations truly transform and create a continuous improvement and innovation culture. We will do this by working directly with our world's experts and supporting each other. We have the training and a community in English and Mandarin. Anyone registering for a course gets six months of free entry to the community and resource library. You also get access to our time optimisation program to help you break out of the whirlwind, gain back time and focus on what is most important. These additional value offerings more than cover the cost of a course. We have also optimised the community approach to minimise time impact on members. The community runs for two hours each month via Zoom. The first hour is training and Q&A on a key topic with one of our world's experts. The second hour enables us to collaborate and help each other on our excellence journey. Help each other sustain focus, overcome challenges and move forward. You will also be able to progress forward and become an Agile Education Program trainer in the future and help others more broadly create a better future. The Enterprise Excellence Academy and Podcast is a social enterprise; profits go to charities that help socially, economically or environmentally create a better future for our world. There are limited numbers with each training cohort. If you are interested, please connect or register quickly on our website http://www.enterpriseexcellenceacademy.comI look forward to meeting many of you and growing together to create a better future.Quotes02:25min An Agile team is only a piece of that picture, a very small piece. Having agile teams in IT does not make you a winner. The whole organisation has to be agile in today's environment.LinksBrad is proud to support many Australian businesses. You can find him on LinkedIn here. If you'd like to speak to him about how he can help your business, call him on 0402 448 445 or email bjeavons@iqi.com.au. Our website is www.bradjeavons.com.Jeff can be found on LinkedIn here. Thanks again for your time and knowledge, Jeff. Thanks for helping us create a better future.What next?Join our community and register for online Scrum/Agile training courses with us.
This week I'm speaking at the inaugural Agile Working Event in London. I'm anticipating a lot of talk about technology, processes and systems all of which are important to support an agile culture. But the culture bit comes first. Companies that expect agility to result from policies and technology without looking at the cultural mores of their workplace will find the same issues they have today, only magnified, when they attempt to be more agile. And whose job is it to create the culture? Leaders start. They can't do it alone, but someone has to start and by definition the people who start are the leaders. That's what's today's episode is all about. Please share your experiences with me on twitter (@blairepalmer), instagram (@blairelyspalmer) or by email (blaire@thatpeoplething.com)