Archive for October 2008

 
 

Complexity and the Credit Crunch

An intriguing article by John Kay about the credit crisis and the amount of control that the “big heads” actually had: none! In any crisis or success (e.g. Seven Habbits of Highly Effective People) we tend to attribute causality to the people at the top because it is easier that way:

Our desire to see history through the lives of great men blinds us to the real complexity of politics, business and finance, and leads us to find intentionality and design where there are only chance and improvisation. The philosopher, Alasdair MacIntyre, put it acerbically: “When imputed organisational skill and power are deployed and the desired effect follows, all that we have witnessed is the same kind of sequence as that to be observed when a clergyman is fortunate enough to pray for rain just before the unpredicted end of a drought!” He also said: “One key reason why the presidents of large corporations do not, as some radical critics believe, control the US is that they do not even succeed controlling their own corporations.” That was the experience of Chuck Prince, former Citigroup chief, and Stan O’Neal, former head of Merrill Lynch.
Could Napoleon have coped in a credit crunch?

Reality is too complex for simple causal links…

Evolving Excellence: Examples of Excellence: Shadow Board

Industrial Engineer’s dream: a nice Shadow Board (via Evolving Excellence). Sometimes, factories get lost in buzzwords – Lean/TPS, Six Sigma etc., attempt to implement them using a top-down approach, but neglect the basics! The “shadows” show the designated place for each tool and give instant feedback on what’s missing!

Evolving Excellence: Examples of Excellence: Shadow Board

Good Times RIP

Good times are over and drastic measures are needed VC uberlords Sequoia Capital (via Techcrunch). Trimming the fat off the corporation is a necessity, but what about growth? Where will it come from? Unless the product/service is something really revolutionary (no Jaiku-style crap), you are in for some tough competition.

Sequoia Venture Capital Warning to CEOs – Get more Business Plans

Subprime Primer

In between work and ALBA lectures, here’s a funny primer on the subprime mess with no comments  Subprime Primer!