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As work gets more complex, 6 rules to simplify

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    I have spent the last two years
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    trying to resolve two enigmas:
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    Why is productivity so disappointing
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    in all the companies where I work for.
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    I have worked with more than 500 companies.
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    Despite all the technological advances --
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    computers, IT communications, telecommunications,
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    the Internet.
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    Enigma number two:
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    Why is there so little engagement at work?
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    Why do people feel so miserable,
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    even actively disengaged?
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    Disengaging their colleagues.
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    Acting against the interest of their company.
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    Despite all the affiliation events,
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    the celebration, the people incentives,
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    the leadership development programs to train
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    managers on how to better motivate their teams.
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    At the beginning, I thought there was
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    a chicken and egg issue:
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    Because people are less engaged
    they are less productive.
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    Or vice versa, because they are less productive,
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    we put more pressure and they are less engaged.
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    But as we were doing our analysis
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    we realized that there was a common route cause
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    to these two issues
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    That relates in fact to the basic
    pillars of management.
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    The way we organize is based on two pillars:
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    The hard, structure [process?] systems.
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    The soft,
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    feelings, sentiments, interpersonal
    relationships, traits, personality.
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    And whenever a company
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    reorganizes, restructures, reengineers,
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    goes through a [unclear] transformation program,
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    it chooses these two pillars.
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    Now, we try to refine them,
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    we try to combine them.
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    The real issue is --
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    and this is the answer to the two enigmas --
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    these pillars are obsolete.
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    Everything you read in business books is based
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    either on or the other
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    or their combination.
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    They are obsolete.
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    When does each work, how do they work
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    when you try to use these approaches
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    in front of the new complexity of business.
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    The hard approach, basically
    is that you start from strategy,
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    requirements, structure, process, system, KPIs, [unclear],
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    committees, headquarters, [unclear]
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    You name it.
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    I forgot all the matrix, incentives, committees,
    middle officers and interfaces.
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    What happens basically on the left,
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    you have more complexity, the
    new complexity of business.
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    We need quality, cost, reliability, speed.
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    And every time there is a new requirement,
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    we use the same approach.
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    We create dedicated structure processed systems,
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    basically to deal with the
    new complexity of business.
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    The hard approach, creates just complicatedness
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    in the organization.
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    Let's take an example.
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    An automotive company, the engineering division
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    is a five dimensional matrix.
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    If you open any cell of the matrix,
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    you find another 20 dimensional matrix.
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    You have Mr. Noise, Mr. [Unclear] Consumption,
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    Mr. [unclear],
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    any new required element,
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    you have a dedicated function
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    in charge of aligning engineers against
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    the new required element.
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    What happens when the new
    required element emerges?
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    Some years ago, the new
    required element appeared
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    on the marketplace.
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    The length of the warranty period.
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    So therefore the new required
    element is repairability,
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    making cars easy to repair.
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    Otherwise when you bring the car
    to the garage to fix the light,
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    if you have to remove the engine
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    to access the lights,
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    the car will have to stay one week in the garage
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    instead of two hours and [unclear] will explode.
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    So, what was the solution using the hard approach?
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    If repairability is the new required element,
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    the solution is to create a new function:
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    Mr. Repairability.
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    And Mr. Repairability creates
    the repairability process.
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    With the repairability [unclear],
    with repairability matrix
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    and eventually repairability incentive.
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    That came on top of 25 other KPIs.
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    What percentage of this people is variable compensation?
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    20 percent at most, divided by 26 KPIs,
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    repairability makes a difference of 0.8 percent.
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    What difference did it make in their actions,
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    their choices to simplify? Zero.
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    But what occurs for zero impact
    Mr. Repairability possess
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    [unclear], evaluation, coordination
    with the 25 other coordinators
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    to have zero impact.
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    Now, in front of the new complexity of business,
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    the new solution is not drawing boxes
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    with reporting lines.
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    It is basically the interplay.
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    How the paths work together.
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    The connections, the interactions, the synapsis.
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    It is not the skeleton of boxes,
    it is the nervous system
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    of adaptiveness and intelligence.
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    You know, you could credit corporation basically
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    whenever people cooperate,
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    they use less resources.
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    In everything, you know the repairability issue
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    is a corporation problem.
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    When you design cars, please, take into account
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    the needs of those who will repair the cars
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    in the after sales garages.
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    When we don't cooperate we need more time,
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    more equipment, more systems, more teams.
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    We need, you know when [unclear] supply
    chain manufacture and don't cooperate
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    we need more stock, more inventories,
    more working capital.
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    Who will pay for that?
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    Shareholders? Customers?
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    No, they will refuse.
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    So who is left?
    The employee.
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    Who have to compensate through their super
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    individual efforts for the lack of cooperation.
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    Stress, burnt out, they are
    overwhelmed, accidents.
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    No wonder they are disengaged.
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    How do the hard and the soft
    try to foster cooperation?
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    Well ...
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    The hard: In banks when their is a problem
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    between the back office and the front office,
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    they don't cooperate. What is the solution?
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    They create the middle office.
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    What happens one year later?
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    Instead of one problem
    between the back and the front,
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    now I have two problems.
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    Between the back and the middle
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    and between the middle and the front.
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    Plus I have to pay for the middle office
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    The hard approach is unable to foster cooperation.
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    It can only add new boxes,
    new bones in the skeleton.
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    The soft approach:
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    To make people cooperate, we need
    to make them like each other.
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    Improve interpersonal feelings,
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    the more people like each other,
    the more they will cooperate.
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    It is totally wrong.
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    It is even counterproductive.
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    Look, at home I have two TVs. Why?
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    Precisely not to have to cooperate with my wife.
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    (Laughter)
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    Not to have to impose tradeoffs to my wife.
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    And why I try not to impose tradeoffs to my wife,
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    precisely because I love my wife.
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    If I didn't love my wife, one TV would be enough.
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    You will watch my favorite football game,
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    if you are not happy, how is the book or the door?
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    (Laughter)
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    The more we like each other,
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    the more we avoid the real cooperation
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    that would strain our relationships
    by imposing tough tradeoffs.
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    And we go for a second TV or we escalate
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    the decision above for arbitration.
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    Definitely, these approaches are obsolete.
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    To deal with complexity, to enhance a novel system,
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    we have created what we call
    the smart simplicity approach
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    based on simple rules.
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    Simple rule number one:
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    Understand what others do.
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    What is their real work?
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    We need to go beyond the boxes,
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    the job descriptions, beyond the surface
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    of the container, to understand the real content.
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    Me, designer, if I put a wire here,
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    I know that it will mean that we will have to
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    remove the engine to access the lights.
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    Second, you need to reenforce integrators.
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    Integrators are not middle
    offices, they are managers,
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    existing managers that you reinforce
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    so that they have power and interest
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    to make others cooperate.
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    How can you reinforce your
    managers as integrators?
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    By removing layers.
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    When there are too many layers
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    people are too far from the action,
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    therefore they need KPIs, matrix,
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    they need [unclear] for reality.
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    They don't understand reality
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    and they add the complicatedness of matrix KPIs.
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    By removing rules, the bigger we are,
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    the more we need integrators.
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    Therefore the less rules we must have
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    to give discretionary power to managers.
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    And we do the opposite --
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    the bigger we are the more rules we create.
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    And we end up with the [unclear]
    of rooms.
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    You need to increase the quanitity of power
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    so that you can empower everybody
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    to use their judgement, their intelligence.
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    You must give more cards to people
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    so that they have the critical mass of cards
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    to take the risk to cooperate.
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    To move out of insulation.
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    Otherwise, they will withdraw. They will disengage.
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    These rules, they come from game theory
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    and organizational sociology.
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    You can increase the shadow of the future.
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    Create feedback loops that expose people
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    to the consequences of their actions.
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    This is what the automotive company did
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    when they saw that Mr. Repairability had no impact.
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    They said to the design engineers:
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    Now, in three years, when the new
    car is launched on the market,
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    you will move to the [unclear]
    work, and become in charge
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    of the ? jet.
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    And neither [unclear] explodes,
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    it would explode in your head. (Laughter)
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    Much more powerful than 0.8
    percent variable compensation.
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    You need also to increase reciprocity,
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    by removing the [unclear] that make us self-sufficient.
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    When you remove these [unclear],
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    you hold me by the nose, I hold you by the ear.
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    We will cooperate.
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    Remove the second TV.
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    There are many second TVs at work
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    that don't create value,
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    they just provide dysfunctional self-sufficiency.
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    You need to reward those who cooperate
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    and blame those who don't cooperate.
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    The [unclear] of the [unclear] group,
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    [unclear], has a great way to use it.
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    He says, blame is not for failure,
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    it is for failing to help or ask for help.
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    It changes everything.
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    So the lead becomes in my
    interest to be transparent
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    on my real witnesses, my real forecast,
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    because I know I will not be blamed if I fail.
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    But if I fail to help, or ask for help.
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    When you do this, it has a lot of implications
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    on organizational design.
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    You stop drawing boxes, dotted line, full line,
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    you look at their interplay.
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    It has a lot of implications on financial policies
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    that we use.
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    On human resource management practices.
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    When you do that, you can manage complexity,
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    the new complexity of business,
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    without getting complicated.
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    You create more value with lower cost.
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    You simultaneously improve
    performance and satisfaction at work
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    because you have removed the common route cause
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    that hinders both complicatedness.
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    This is your battle, business leaders.
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    The real battle is not against competitors.
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    This is rubbish, very abstract.
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    When do we meet competitors to fight them?
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    The real battle is against ourselves,
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    against our bureaucracy, our complicatedness.
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    Only you can fight, can do it.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
As work gets more complex, 6 rules to simplify
Speaker:
Yves Morieux
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:01

English subtitles

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