Peer2Politics
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Peer2Politics
on peer-to-peer dynamics in politics, the economy and organizations
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How to make sure nothing gets done at work

How to make sure nothing gets done at work | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it
A World War II manual on undermining organizations from within might describe your office all too well.
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This is how bureaucracy dies - Fortune

This is how bureaucracy dies - Fortune | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it

(TheMIX) -- If you've spent a lifetime accumulating and wielding bureaucratic power, and if you've calibrated your career progress by the steps you've taken up the corporate ladder, or by the number of people who work for you, or the perks you've been awarded, or the scope of your authority, then envisioning a world in which leaders report to the led may be a bit daunting.

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Bureaucracy Must Die - blogs.hbr.org (blog)

Bureaucracy Must Die - blogs.hbr.org (blog) | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it

Almost 25 years ago in the pages of HBR, C.K. Prahalad and I urged managers to think in a different way about the building blocks of competitive success.  We argued that a business should be seen as a portfolio of “core competencies” as well as a portfolio of products.  By building and nurturing deep, hard-to-replicate skills, an organization could fatten margins and fuel growth.  While I still believe that distinctive capabilities are essential to distinctive performance, I have increasingly come to believe (as I argued in an earlier post) that even the most competent organizations also suffer from a clutch of core incompetencies. Businesses are, on average, far less adaptable, innovative, and inspiring than they could be and, increasingly, must be.

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