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- 0 commentson Busting the Matrix
- by John Anthony Coleman
The matrix promises flexibility and shared resources. In practice, it's where flow goes to die—no one can make decisions alone, so nothing much changes. One antidote: an archipelago of adaptiveness. Build a substantial team-of-teams that works semi-independently on a real product, using genuinely adaptive ways of working in a permanent island designed to radiate change outward—not get reabsorbed. Volunteers, not assignments. Distributed leadership. Customer-informed learning and flow. Protect it through coopertition, nested PDSA loops, and Avengers-style closed shields against silo pressure. The matrix must evolve. Networks result and thrive.
- 0 commentson Coping strategies delivery folks have to deal with
- by John Anthony Coleman
Coping strategies delivery folks have to deal with
Management processes, workflows, and ways of working don't cohere. To borrow from Steve Denning: when there is institutional BS, it is naïve to be transparent. Call it muda or inefficiency—doesn't pack the same punch. Picture a product developer assigned to three projects to maximize utilization, pulled between project managers and arbitrary deadlines, rewarded only for their specialism, expected to comply with architecture, security, and privacy—while running experiments and improving continuously. Change is what happens when everything else is done. Everything else is never done. Executives and board members have a role in removing institutional BS.
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- 0 commentson Beyond Dashboards: How an Obeya Room Powers Data-Informed Decision making and Accelerates Delivery
- by Nader Talai
Beyond Dashboards: How an Obeya Room Powers Data-Informed Decision making and Accelerates Delivery
Predictable delivery doesn't require a crystal ball—it requires a commitment to evidence. Subjective status updates lead to missed targets and shaky forecasts. An evidence-based approach replaces them with objective data: clearer insights, faster decisions, less waste. But dashboards alone aren't enough. The Obeya—Japanese for "big room"—turns data into shared understanding. It integrates KPIs, flow metrics, feedback, and risks into a single source of truth, drives focused discussion at a regular cadence, and converts decisions into tracked, accountable action. The most effective Obeyas are tailored to a specific purpose, with a leadership style to match.
- 0 commentson Unleashing Innovation: Practical Steps to Cultivate Creativity in Every Corner of Your Organization.
- by Nader Talai
Unleashing Innovation: Practical Steps to Cultivate Creativity in Every Corner of Your Organization.
In today’s fast-moving business world, innovation isn’t a luxury—it’s a necessity. But game-changing ideas often don’t come from the boardroom. They come from the people closest to the work. Unleashing Innovation explores how to bridge the gap between those who spot problems and those empowered to solve them. From creating psychological safety to breaking down silos and celebrating experimentation, this guide offers practical steps to cultivate creativity at every level of your organization.
- 0 commentson What is Evolved and why is it needed?
- by John Anthony Coleman
What is Evolved and why is it needed?
You tried the shortcuts. You realize there is no escalator to success. You want the people around you to be comfortable with you, you to be there for them, and for them to be there for you.
There are no set recipes for how to do things, but we will give you proven ideas, principles, and success patterns to try out and see what works for you. Self-awareness, emergent learning, and adaptation are essential.
You can join one self-contained module, some modules, or the entire series. Some modules cover in-depth topics that others only lightly touch. The content is interconnected yet independent.
- 0 commentson Why now?
- by John Anthony Coleman
Excessive bureaucracy curtails adaptiveness. So does an attitude of keeping promises even when it's learned they were terrible promises. More coherence is needed.
To mitigate the risk of negative consequences, more executives and board members need to embrace paradoxes and avoid false dichotomies. Consider humane effectiveness, adaptiveness, ambidexterity, and timeliness.
- 0 commentson It's time
- by John Anthony Coleman
As an executive or board member, do you want to turn the tide? Do you want to be personally associated with something different, something positive, something pattern-oriented, something context-oriented? Do you want to protect your legacy? Do you want better results?
Do you want to be associated with humane effectiveness, adaptiveness, and timeliness?

