Time to get your licence

In the last half of the 20th century in North America it was assumed that as an adult you had a driver’s licence and that you most likely owned or had access to a car. I know, I didn’t get my licence until I was 26 and that made me a very rare specimen indeed. The optimal way to get around our cities and especially our rural areas is by motor vehicle. Malls are being built that do not have any designated pedestrian or bicycle lanes. We still design as if everyone moves around by automobile.

drivers licence

Well it’s now the end of the first decade of the 21st century, the Web is over 15 years old and e-mail is much older than that. However, many in my generation (the baby boomers) are living as if the Internet is an interesting thing to have around or “surf” but not really essential, like a car is. I’ve noticed this especially with boomers working inside organizations. But things are changing and we see that most younger people own a mobile device and manage several networks on the Web – Facebook, YouTube, StumbleUpon, Digg, etc. For them, a car may be optional, but a mobile Web device is essential.

Understanding the Web today is like driving a car 25 years ago. You need it to get around, work and be social. It’s as important for individuals as it is for organizations. Think back a decade or two and imagine a business without a parking lot; today that’s getting a lot easier to imagine. The Web changes everything and Internet strategy can no longer be left to a few specialists to “do that Web thing”. We all need to get involved and learn by doing. You can’t become a driver without practice and the same goes for the Web. I would suggest that anyone who doesn’t have a learner’s Web permit had better get one soon. That’s especially true for my fellow baby boomers, many of whom are making the decisions at work.

Image by ndanger

Learning about healthy workplaces

The Project did not last very long but I learned a few things along the way.

First, I saw how England and Scotland are using social media to address the stigma around mental health issues, with Shift and SeeMe. Advocacy and non-profit groups could take some lessons from these organizations, especially Shift’s high quality videos.

A clear answer to my main question eluded me during what should have been the first half of the project, “How can we engage senior leadership in organizations to take mental health seriously and adapt their workplaces appropriately?” Engaging business leaders on what is considered a non-essential area requires much time and networking. It’s a long-term campaign and social media are only one part of that.

I came across Beth Kanter’s excellent resource on Non-profits, health care and social media which included a comprehensive slide presentation. It seems that 59% of Americans (and one can assume Canadians as well) get their health information online. If you’re in the health information business, then you had better be online. Also, connecting people and communities is necessary, as “People tend to trust ‘a person like me’ more than authority figures from business, government or the media.” Here’s another reason why non-profits and advocacy groups should use online social networking – it’s cheap and connects people who share some values.

I learned a lot about mental health in the workplace, such as the fact that 2008 was the worst year for disability claims in the Canadian public service and that over 44% of these are mental health conditions, as reported in The Ottawa Citizen . From some of the facts, I created a slideshare presentation, using CC Flickr photos:

In the short period that I looked at mental health in the workplace, I came to see it as the 21st century version of physical safety. In the 20th century concerned people and trade unions fought to create safer workplaces. Our mines, factories and work sites are now much safer in this country than they were 50 years ago. My step-father died several years ago from emphysema which was partially due to time working in the silver mines of BC without any respiratory filters. Most workplaces today have good policies and practices on workplace safety. In many cases, it’s the law.

Moving to a post-industrial economy many, if not most, of our products and services are now intangible. Much of the work  we do is knowledge work, requiring more brain than brawn. Even farmers need knowledge on a wide spectrum of disciplines (weather, markets, genetics, financing) in order to run a successful operation. Our brain is our primary means of making a living, therefore keeping a healthy mental state just makes sense.

The concept of work/life balance is not just a feel good strategy but is essential for any knowledge-intensive workplace. So, do we really need all the numbers to justify a mental health policy for the workplace? The data show the importance of mental health in the workplace, but we don’t pay attention to it and we rarely discuss it.

What’s the future? A recent Canadian study showed that depression and anxiety affect up to 15% of pre-schoolers. Mental health is an important issue that will not go away and informed discussions are necessary at all levels. I’m glad I learned about this over the Summer.

Friday’s Finds #15

Once again, from the Twitter files this past week:

Work:

“And what I found out is that talent is much overrated. It is motivation and help that makes the difference. They [HR] talk about ´talent´ as if it is a thing that actually exists, apart from effort, motivation and experience.” @MireilleJansma

Dan Pink at TED: “there’s a mismatch between what science knows and what business does”

50 years of applying job evaluation methodologies has created organizational structures that are rigid, non-responsive & slow to change. via @jonhusband

Web:

Open Atrium is an OS (Drupal+) team portal starter package Open Atrium via @jaycross

“Wikipedia’s greatest gift to humanity: proof that there are more pedants than vandals” – via @sebpaquet and found in @lemire’s blog comments. Related: Wikipedia is simply undergoing the process of becoming the system it exists within. via @gsiemens

Twollow.com is locally built Twitter app, and Steve (@comforteagle) clarifies some things about a news report to which Carman Pirie (@pirie) adds more comments

Flashback to 1998: Work the Web video via @elsua and a description of the merger of marketing & KM in law firms – true for any knowledge-intensive org

Learning:

If complex systems researchers don’t get serious about the scientific method, their field is going to fizzle out – Networks are Killing Science via @lemire

I said that we should Kill the Curriculum and @busynessgirl responded, “how about we just hack it?” Which of course I agree with.

Life:

Cars Cause Most Bike-Car Crashes via @folkstone

Saying Yes to donating snipped hair for Oil Spill Hair Mats to rescue oceans. via @yesmagazine @PureAveda

Soaking up carbon with artificial trees & algae-based photobioreactors. via @pathways

Role of an online community manager

Mark Sylvester hosted a web conference today  on the role of an online community manager. Here are some highlights from my notes:

  • The session used tweetchat.com for the text chat, but this medium was very slow. Alternatives to Twitter should be used if you want online chat. An integrated chat was not available with the Citrix platform. Using Twitter as a chat tool also creates a lot of extra noise for your regular followers on Twitter (via @xpconcept)
  • CM is not a 9-5 job – uses twitter a lot, comments on blogs, uses back-channels for private communications the role changes as the needs of the community change
  • CM is a very time-consuming job and the results are not always tangible and visible.
  • There is also an internal role in explaining the role and activities in online communities to the organization, to answer, “what do you do all day other than play on Twitter?”.
  • Online communities don’t manage themselves.
  • Communities often don’t grow the way they are planned and may be taken over by a sub-group.
  • CM can bridge gap between inside & outside the organization.
  • CM doesn’t fit into any single departmental silo – role is similar to ombudsman
  • CM should not take oneself too seriously
  • “Communities don’t want to be managed” – they want to be nurtured
  • Building community means giving up control.
  • How do you get executive buy-in?
    • find someone with an existing community mindset
    • get executives into a real network experience in order to understand
  • The launch phase requires a small group that is passionate and “transacting” a lot.
  • Building community is not about collecting as many people as possible.
  • Key: crowd-source community management [my experience was this worked on Work Literacy]
  • Dynamic tension in communities: control vs member empowerment (experienced CM’s seem to be at ease with loss of control)

More: The Iceberg Effect of Community Management

Recommended Reading (from the panelists):

Linked: How everything is connected to everything else

The decision to join

Six pixels of separation

The new community rules

Groundswell

Related post of mine: The Community Manager

Mind Map: The Networked Society

Over the years of writing this blog I’ve reorganized, added tags, categories and the Key Posts & Toolbox pages in order to help make sense of over 1,500 posts. A major theme in my writing has been our shift to a networked society and what that means in how we work and learn. I’m especially interested in the fact that working and learning are merging in many contexts. Learning (often viewed from the limited perspective of training or education) is not a separate activity, removed from work.

This mind map links several concepts and related articles around the theme of the networked society:

Networked Society

Working

Structures

Living

Learning

Relevance in the Network

In Become a meta L&D Manager (requires free registration), my colleagues Jay Cross & Clark Quinn advise that it’s time to take a broader look at learning in the organization:

“Your charter as head of L&D [learning & development] is to optimise learning throughout the organisation, not just in the pockets that once belonged to HR. This takes a broader perspective than what you deal with day-to-day. You’ve got to rise above the noise to see the underlying patterns and then optimise them.”

In the comments, Martine Parry adds to this topical article, saying that the ” … training role will become responsible for large deployments and for legal and governance issues – only.” This is the root of the change that we are facing in organizations today: relevance in the network. There are many silos of support functions in any large organization, each with their own culture and perspectives on business performance – HR; L&D; IT; KM; Marketing; Communications; et al. And of course there are also the individual business units as well as the key driver of revenue in many companies – Sales. If roles have to merge, who will win out, a business unit or a support function? It’s quite possible that the traditional training function will become marginalized.

History shows that significant changes in how we communicate result in significant changes in how we work. Many silos of support functions will not work in a network-centric organization as there’s too much redundancy, duplication of effort and slowness to react. It’s becoming obvious that only highly networked organizations are going to be successful. As another colleague, Jon Husband, puts it:

“The performance management schemes, grade levels in the organizations and compensation practices have yet to recognize how work gets done in networked environments and increasingly, in a networked world.”

Does it really matter that training or L&D will be marginalized? In the long run, I think not. We are seeing the merging of roles and functions as networks bypass command & control. That means that each departmental silo will lose some of its traditional power. What will emerge will have to be more effective for the networked organization. As a learning or workplace performance professional your choice is clear:

  1. Fight to ensure that your department wins the short-term internal political game of leading organizational learning; or
  2. Park your ego (and that of your tribe) to work with everyone in the organization to make it more effective in the long-term.

It’s obvious which choice I would recommend but #2 will be fraught with problems, such as being ostracized by your departmental colleagues and maybe even working yourself out of a job. However, if your organization doesn’t succeed in the long run, neither will your job.

silos_flickr_zoomzoom-304135268

Photo by ZoomZoom

Being participative

Matthew Hodgson asks at The AppGap what participation and engagement really mean and he refers to the IAP2  core values of public participation. These values, based on “the belief that those who are affected by a decision have a right to be involved in the decision-making process” are important for a participative democracy but I think that something is still missing. The values seem to imply that people are involved during the decision-making process only, as in let’s get some public input and set up some round tables, forums and discussion areas; much as the government is doing on copyright in Canada.

Like voting every four years, even the most participatory models offered by our institutions fail to grasp the nature of our networked world. Today, much of the public is always-on and you can find someone talking about the issues. Participation doesn’t stop any more. One shot deals, even those that are open and inclusive, do not recognize this sea change in communications.

Euan Semple discusses how different life and work in a global network are going to be:

I am currently reading Manuel Castells’ fantastic book The Power of Communication. In it he talks of the global network society’s tendency to truncate time and how the industrial society, with its ideas of progress, deferred gratification, Protestant work ethic etc. made becoming more important than being. In his view in the networked society “being cancels becoming”.

As a fellow freelancer, Euan is being rather than becoming. There is no corporate ladder to climb or professional designation to achieve. If everyone felt this way, many of our institutions (schools, universities, certification bodies) would collapse. Perhaps that is why many will in the near future.

The challenge for organizations and institutions in a global networked society will be to incorporate “being” into their management models. Participation becomes a constant and dynamic flow through the organization and outside it. How can you be participative in everything, not just to make the initial decision? How does that change the role of management? What is management in a network? There are probably some answers from those who are already being, accepting life in Beta, as well as those who never embraced the industrial model of becoming. We have to look to the edges of modern society to see the possibilities.

Living on the EdgePhoto: Living on the Edge by Giant Ginkgo

Friday’s Finds #14

From the twitter files this past week:

Many US films don’t even bother to register in Canada and they complain about copyright infringement? via @michaelgeist

The Search Engine Optimization scam via @jonhusband

The corporation is so clueless … that sometimes [change] really does depend on a single individual

Our collective challenge: how to empower workers for self-organization

I declare social media sufficiently mainstream” says @jclarey

nature imbued us with an unquenchable drive to discover, to explore”  via @jonhusband

Meta-analysis of 99 studies: showed that students online performed better (9 percentiles) than in face to face classroom situations via @pwmartin

The real reason why you, the individual, should blog via @jocenado

@jayrosen_nyu If ever you run into trouble understanding what “social media” is… just substitute “connecting across, rather than up.” via @jonhusband

Blogs: Social Media’s Home Base

I’ve called my blog my persistent presence on the Web. It’s the one place that hasn’t changed over the years — it’s just a bit bigger. As more social media applications come and go and we see value in some of them and maybe even use them more than our blogs, it becomes even more important to have a spot that doesn’t change too much. Here at jarche.com is where you will always be able to find me. The look has changed over the years, as has the underlying system (from Drupal to WordPress).

I noted that it’s important to know where’s your data but you also need some control over all the social media you’re using. The problem is that you’re on somebody else’s platform. A blog can be used as the more stable node in your social media ecosystem. For example here are several social media applications I’ve used but have pretty much discarded for one reason or another — Furl, Magnolia, Spoke, Xing, Blogflux, Eduspaces (insert your own list). However, my blog hasn’t changed — it’s my social media home base. In addition, blogging also helps to develop meta-cognitive processes and as Tom Peters says in this interviewno single thing in the past 15 years has been more important to my professional life than has blogging”.
blog-homebase
My four C’s of social media can be addressed through many social media applications but these processes do not need to be owned by any single application. I would say that it would be a mistake to use a single SaaS (software as a service) platform as your only way to engage in these processes. You can create, contextualize, connect and co-create in many ways; most of which can, and perhaps should, be linked back to your blog. Having watched MySpace get marginalized while Facebook dominates for now, it’s only a matter of time before more new platforms that we don’t own come along and lure the next bunch of digital sharecroppers. To see where blogging may be headed (Blogs 2.0?) check out Om Malik’s The Evolution of Blogging.

Work 2.0

I have little doubt that industrial management and all that it has created (chain of command, human resources, line & staff, production, etc.) are the wrong models for the emerging, networked workplace. This is a workplace with increasing numbers of free-agents and permanent employees who don’t have a job for life, especially as the average lifespan of corporations decreases while those of workers increases. Many workers, including white collar ones, can’t afford to retire. Existing management models and support functions were developed to keep things stable and ensure that people conformed to corporate culture. There is much less time to do that as workplace culture evolves with society, markets and technology.

Look at what Web 2.0 and the resulting network effects have already changed in our workplaces:

The job search has become fluid; no longer a discrete event, with social communities like LinkedIn providing a platform for ongoing conversations between those offering to work and those looking for workers. A job seeker one day may become a hiring agent the next day and vice versa. The roles and boundaries in recruiting and hiring are blurring, just as the reverse job post is on the rise.

Learning has become part of work. Access to much of the world’s information, coupled with online professional social communities has turned us into grazers and foragers, no longer content to feed our intellect only at the corporate trough. As anthropologist Michael Wesch has said, “when media change, then human relationships change“. People of all ages are now digital content creators, no longer satisfied with being supplied with learning programs but creating tutorials, explanatory videos and everything that can be conceived and explained. This empowerment is changing how workers value and perceive professional development.

Today, workers need the workplace less for their social needs. Even when we change jobs or communities, we can now keep our social networks. It used to be that the only place you could meet new people was at work or through family or perhaps at church. Today, our social networks are an always-on connection to trusted friends and colleagues. That means less influence from employers.

These three examples are indicators of a changing relationship between workers and employers, enabled by the Web. In larger companies that relationship is the responsibility of HR. However, if asked, few of us would consider ourselves “human resources”, but that’s how workers are officially viewed by many employers. That top-down, controlled relationship is getting strained. You can learn about this from the thousands of “human resources” who are blogging, podcasting or vlogging, like the articulate Starbuck’s employee. This memo to the CEO was not massaged by any manager, because hyperlinks subvert hierarchies, no matter how many internal policies are created to the contrary. Just ask United Airlines about their policy on damaging guitars. It’s probably changed a bit in the last month.

To get work done in this networked, Web 2.0 environment, a more resilient organizational framework is required, like wirearchy (a dynamic two-way flow of power and authority based on information, knowledge, trust and credibility, enabled by interconnected people and technology). Based on such an open framework, support functions like HR have to figure out how they can best help the organization. Here are some suggestions:

  • Think and act at a macro level (what to do) and leave the micro (how to do it) to each worker or team. The little stuff is changing too fast.
  • Engage with Web media and understand how they work. The Web is  too important to be left to IT, communications or outside vendors.
  • Use social media to make work easier or more effective. Use them to solve problems for you.
  • Make yourself and your function  redundant. Teach people how to fish and move on to the next challenge. If you’re maintaining a steady state then you’ve failed to evolve with the organization and the environment.