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MAV: Future of Local Government Change, strategy, innovation, frugality & decision-making Kate Delaney 28 May 2015
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Do you want to get better?
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The environment in which you work
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“Fiscal restraint will last the professional lifetime of everyone in this room” Speech to the Institute of Public Administration New Zealand 19 February 2015 By Hon Bill English
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Public expectations today future
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… in general
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static dynamic
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simplecomplex
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4 uncertainty extremes Uncertainty of a decision-making four extremes: – Static + Simple = Certain – Static + Complex = Bit Uncertain – Dynamic + Simple = Uncertain – Turbulent + Complex = Very Uncertain
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The type of choices you make &conversations you have about the long term … influenced by uncertainty levels
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Build understanding (What ‘is’ the problem?)
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Shape choices (How do we address the problem?)
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Better decisions (What choices should we make?)
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Uncertainty and the environment you work in Static + Simple = Certain = more time on decision-making conversations Static + Complex = Bit Uncertain = more time on shaping choices conversations Dynamic + Simple = Uncertain = more time on both of building understanding & shaping choices conversations Turbulent + Complex = Very Uncertain = more time on building understanding conversations
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Innovative organisations Ah ha!
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Two aspects of innovation, which require different skills & capabilities ExploreExploit
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3 habits of innovative organisations Habit 1: “creative abrasion” Habit 2: “creative agility” Habit 3: “creative resolution”
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“Good” long-term decisions (‘good’ is of course subject to interpretation)
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4 characteristics of long-term decisions Cultivate capacity to ‘see around corners’ Look for decisive aspects of the situation Concentrate your effort Consider what is actionable
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Uh Oh! Where can things go wrong? … a few of many reasons
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People have an action bias An action bias That lead us to jump into developing solutions before we fully understand a problem. – It’s easy to misread the environment Looking at too few options? Looking at too many options?
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Automatic behaviour People tend to act the same in similar situations – Like the informal rule that you sit in the same chair at periodical meetings
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Functional units cause barriers Functional units build barriers to innovation possibly because they don’t ‘get it’
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Managers fear failure Managers hesitate to put resources on the line for new ideas Investing too little? Acting without sufficient resources? Investing too much? Allowing resources to remain idle?
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Employees fear failure Employees fear failure rather than table ideas
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Wanted: An overall approach based on a diagnosis of challenges
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So what? Starting questions: – How much extra work results from incentive and evaluation systems that pressure staff to look busy and outperform one another? – Which information flows can you omit? Information that doesn’t improve decisions is a wasteful distraction. – Which decisions and judgments can you standardise rather than make in costly meetings and communications? – How can you work with others to simplify their processes so that you can simplify yours?
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Sources of ideas for the presentation: Think tanks/consultancy firms: Deloitte McKinsey Boston Consulting Group Monitor Institute Leaders Against Routine Academics/commentators: Eric Berlow Francesca Gino Seth Godin Linda Hill Daniel Kahneman Richard Rumelt Bradley Staats Roselinde Torres And, My experience
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Do you want to get better? Questions?
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Kate Delaney The ‘pinball effect’ – (i.e. linking ideas together to create desirable futures) Worked for Canadian Government for 17 years Working for my self since 1998 (in Australia) M: 0407 292 679
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