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Sharla Lair

Before You Innovate, You First Must Kill Your Company | trainingmag.com - 3 views

  • Companies are investing major resources in training employees to“think big,” “get inspired,” and nimbly embrace change. Some have made significant progress in the last several years, but most innovation initiatives fall flat. Why? Because too many change initiatives simply add another layer of processes to the to-do lists of already overwhelmed and tired employees. Rather than piling on more, you must begin by getting rid of things rather than continually building on what doesn’t work. In effect, you must “kill” your company.
  • Therein lies the dilemma, because even as we shunt aside innovation in favor of more immediately gratifying business initiatives, most of us know that innovation—the ability to develop novel and useful ideas with a business purpose—is what will really drive growth and carry our organizations into the future. It’s, therefore, imperative that we better balance how much time we spend working internally on ways to make the status quo more efficient with time we spend examining what’s changing externally so we can start questioning the status quo altogether. We need to accept some risk, because innovation requires taking risks. We need to find ways to develop and support a culture that makes room for innovative insight. A company mired in complicated processes and short-term results is simply not in a position to encourage innovation, no matter how many new programs its leaders talk about or implement, or how often they demand innovation from their employees. It just won’t work. To create the company of tomorrow, you must break down the bad habits, silos, and inhibitors that exist today. That’s why you have to kill the company first. It’s probably the most innovative thing a leader can do.
  • The challenge for most companies isn’t how to get people to be more innovative; it’s how to stop paying lip service to innovation and create a structure and culture in which it actually can flourish and deliver results.
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    Do not ignore this article!  This article is quite timely with the all of the changes occurring in MOBIUS.
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    Hm. If you see your company on the road, kill it? More seriously, this reminds me of some of the readings I had on library management back in graduate school-- how after awhile, a workflow begins to exist only to preserve itself, not to further the goals of the organization. In order for said organization to remain relevant, it's necessary to occsionally review workflows and procedures to see which ones are working and which aren't-- and can thus be dropped.
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    Spot on, Jennifer! Spring cleaning!!! The trick is to not wait too long to do it.
Sharla Lair

How to Engage Your Customers and Employees - R "Ray" Wang - Harvard Business Review - 1 views

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    I think this is more of what I was hoping to learn about in the "facilitating meetings" webinar. This is a nice surface-level description of what is required to facilitate engagement. 
Scott Peterson

Fairness questions raised about the retire/rehire of a Fort Worth Librarian - 0 views

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    This article looks at a legal but somewhat controversial practice in some municipalities where employees can retire and receive a full pension, but still come back to work full time on a salary. In the case in question a librarian who retired 8 years ago was hired over 66 other candidates at a salary $22,000 higher than an an entry level hire would be paid. Some concerns are also raised about how retire/rehire may prevent young educators from getting jobs.
Scott Peterson

Telegrams STOP: End of service delivering joy and heartache - 0 views

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    India has shut down it's telegram service, which ran continuously from 1851 until now. I 1985 the service sent 600,000 telegrams a day and as recently as 2008 had 22,000 employees. At the shutdown it had a staff of 968 in 75 offices handling maybe 5,000 a day.
Sharla Lair

How to Make Your Big Idea Really Happen - John Hagel III and John Seely Brown - John Ha... - 1 views

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    Here is another article that touches on topics that can help one better facilitate meetings. It is a little pie-in-the-sky, but one thing I've learned in my albeit very short professional life: genuine enthusiasm can take you and your ideas a long way.
Megan Durham

At Kansas libraries, getting a pan is a piece of cake - KansasCity.com - 1 views

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    MOBIUS needs to do this only instead of empty cake pans they should be filled with cake and instead of going to other libraries they should come directly to the office. A longtime practice of checking out cake pans at libraries in Kansas, particularly in rural areas, has increased as people look for a way to save money while still providing treats for special occasions. More cake pans are being loaned at the Great Bend Public Library after employees recently moved nearly 100 of the pans from a back room to bookshelves, The Hutchinson News reported.
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    I've heard of libraries in Missouri that loan cake pans, too. I can't remember where she was from, but remember at MLA several years ago a librarian telling me about all the different shapes and "characters" of cake pans they had--cool idea!
Megan Durham

Bad sign for e-readers? E Ink sales plunge - 0 views

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    A A Here's a sign that e-readers are struggling in the U.S.: E Ink Holdings, the Taiwan-based company that makes e-reader screens for companies such as Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Sony, just had its worst quarter in four years. This article had some interesting points and the comments brought up some good questions as well. As a former B&N employee it will be interesting to see what they do in the next coming years with the e-reader/e-books.
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