Posts Tagged ‘apps’

Monday, October 15th, 2012

We Live in Uncertain Times

We live in uncertain times….

No joke…

In fact we live in the Age of Beta – we never know what’s going to work or not…but we take the plunge and update our Apps as they come – and by Apps I mean even our “Lifeapps”…that is, relationships, philosophies, ideas.

So why do we accept the uncertainty of the latest iPhone, Microsoft or Angry Birds release and yet many obsess at work or in relationships because of a perceived lack of clarity? We limit our ability to perform, innovate or transform because of fear of failure – again linked to uncertainty and absence of clarity.

(More on The Uncertainty Principle here)

Now – none of us would want to live in a feudal society (unless you were King…), but there was little uncertainty – chances were you could starve to death or be killed on some whim – but you knew your place and knew it was where you belonged. And in highly structured hierarchical societies and companies it’s much the same…it’s good to be King – and, yes, you know your place and there is clarity – for sure – but BORING…LIMITING…and probably little or no innovation and – by the way – they ultimately fail.

So how do we as a society break out? How do we – even in the absence of full clarity – give people the opportunity to excel through experimentation and innovation – how do we limit the fear and maximize the Beta?

Esther Dyson (thank you, Esther!!!) gave me the clue last week when she shared the following thought with me: A good leader absorbs uncertainty…whereas a manager simply distributes it.

Think about it – absorbing uncertainty to me means being accountable – letting others know that there is no blame, no finger pointing, no deflection of failure. That to me is true leadership.

Distributing uncertainty means that you look to hedge the bet on failure. You are looking for others to be lined up along the blame wall – that is not leadership.

Why do we accept beta releases – imperfect forms – from some? Because they have the credibility of accountability. We know Apple and Microsoft will make it right; we know that they will stand behind their product.

The Graveyards of Failed Enterprises are filled with the remains of those who didn’t absorb the uncertainty but rather ignored or shared it. The ground is littered with the detritus of relationships where uncertainty ruled. Lack of leadership leads to rampant uncertainty, and rampant uncertainty leads to certain failure.

Listen:

“The quest for certainty blocks the search for meaning. Uncertainty is the very condition to impel man to unfold his powers.” Erich Fromm

Think on this – because I think it takes the idea to another dimension. A true leader absorbs uncertainty – meaning that they don’t necessarily create clarity. To the contrary, they make uncertainty OK – they make it a condition of positive development; they unleash the full opportunity inherent in uncertainty – ergo, allowing us all to develop our true power.

So if you are in a company or in a relationship or are contemplating the why of it all – if you really want meaning – be a leader – absorb the fear of the unknown – accept the full accountability for the journey and my sense is that you and your quest will flourish.

And if you can’t…if you are unable to make that leap…link yourself; hitch your wagon to someone who can…don’t get blocked – unfold….

One last thought – also from Fromm – but to me completes the thought.

Listen:

Critical and radical thought will only bear fruit when it is blended with the most precious quality man is endowed with the love of life.”

Think on that – I believe that love of life is what gives us the strength to absorb the unknown…and the more we absorb and the more we discover, the richer the lives we lead…

What do you think?

  • I love this. uncertainty is great especially if people are willing to give it a go. when we think we can minimize the risk, we become paralyzed. I have always heard that since there is no control the only way to feel it is to let it go.
  • Good question -- and not sure of the answer -- I think there is another layer -- which uncertainty? Is there an absolute -- a "truth" if you will about uncertainty? can even uncertainty be spun?
  • What a pleasure these blogs provide! I love the mots justes you unearth and the quotes, and your ability to weave them into a discussion that is both uplifting and challenging. I wonder how people would feel if they applied the Esther principle to the current election campaign: I think Mr Romney practices the rhetoric of certainty whilst distributing ...
Monday, June 6th, 2011

With Internet Blocked…

With Internet Blocked, Protesters Are Still Able to Mobilize….

So reads a news headline from The New York Times on Saturday, June 4, 2011. The Italics are mine…

The reference is to Syria and the ongoing repression by that brutal regime. But this is not about politics – it’s about human behavior and the almost stupid lack of even basic understanding of how it’s people who drive the use of technology and more so push it into directions that the obtuse analysts of our age never even imagined.

Imagine that – they were able to mobilize with the Internet. GMOOT – Give Me One of Those revolutions…

The press and such were so caught up with the already legendary Arab Spring and its use of Facebook, Twitter and the like that I imagine it’s inconceivable to them that people can communicate any other way. Let alone figure out how to rally together, organize and assemble.

Makes me wonder how on that momentous July 14th in 1789 the rumors in Paris managed to spread such that a crowd at least 3x times the expected showed up at the Bastille – not to mention the guards who defected and joined them. Imagine that! Did the headline the next day read – “With no digital communication at all – seeing as how it had not yet been invented – the French Revolution began…”

Or what about that fateful June 15th in Odessa, Russia, when in less than 4 hours thousands of Odessans gathered on the steps made famous in the movie Potemkin (the massacre depicted never actually happened, but that montage sequence inspired the famous Baptism scene in the Godfather) and made the Russian Revolution a reality – how did the participants know to gather? In fact, how did they know where to go? Have we missed the early origins of tweeting?

In fact, we have! And worse – way too many continue to do so in pursuit of GMOOT thinking.

What we are missing is the human need that drives it all. It only took a month for half of all Harvard undergraduates to join Thefacebook.com – the first rendition of today’s largest global social network. The lightening speed adoption was because Zuckerberg understood – clearly he understood – the deep need, desire, drive we all have to share and the baked-in-our-DNA behavioral triggers associated with that need. Facebook works because we have human needs – not because the technology application evolved us into a new form of life.

So when I see headlines like “Are Still Able to Mobilize,” I worry – I worry for our humanity and just as much I worry for our technology – because without the two intertwined, neither will get as far as they should. And both will suffer.

Seems to me that as we lurch about listening to so-called experts in social digital communications and the like, we are emulating the following – listen:

“I know a lot about cars. I can look at a car’s headlights and tell you exactly which way it’s coming”. Mitch Hedberg

If we are going to take advantage of the true power of the Internet – blocked or not – we had better do better than merely looking at the “headlights.”

And one more thing…

Check out Instagram – a new app for the iPhone (so far only iPhone) –  one of a new group of apps that are about “the Social Web embracing sharing of moments.”

Glad it’s the social Web driving that behavior…

Now check out the Kodak Brownie – and go back further to Ancient Egypt and the development of papyrus…

Want to hear from you!!!