networks : the end game

Outsourcing and the Networked Business

Last night, I attended the Association for Strategic Planning’s meeting at Suffolk University. The guest was Amit S. Mukherjee, author of The Spider’s Strategy: Creating Networks to Avert Crisis, Create Change, and Really Get Ahead. Amit gave a great talk showing the history of productivity leaps in business (he made the case that weapons manufacturers [...]

Networks: A Question of Control

As with so many other aspects of knowledge assets, there are both bottom-up and top-down aspects to networks. There are many who study networks that see them as analogous to self-organizing, living systems that occur in nature. If you believe this, then you believe that organizations can organize themselves. There is a lot of truth [...]

Putting Networks to Use…in and for the organization

In all the discussions in recent weeks here on the growth of networks and organizations, it is hard to say which came first—the human or the technological connection. The shift to a knowledge economy has made it more and more attractive to connect and automate using IT and networking technologies. The rise of new forms [...]

Mapping Personal Networks

Another way to approach network analysis within your intangible capital knowledge factory is to zoom down to the level of individual workers. One of the common ways of using this kind of map is to identify and find patterns in the interaction between groups of employees and/or groups of external people. This kind of analysis [...]

Use Value Network maps to understand how your organization works from the bottom up

We usually look at organizational networks at three levels. The first (described as a knowledge factory) is at a strategic level, built on the high-level inventory of an organization’s intangible capital. Today, I’ll talk about the next takes the perspective of the knowledge factory down one more level of detail (third perspective, personal networks comes [...]

Thinking about your organization as a network

The Internet is one huge network. But it is also the platform on which many smaller networks can be formed. Your organization exists in and through a lot of these smaller networks as well as the meta-network of the internet.

Networks and the Organization: An Historical Context

The ability of people and organizations to connect with each other and to form networks moved into hyper-drive with the rise of the über network of our time, the Internet. Peter Drucker, one of the leading management thinkers of the last fifty years, highlighted the importance of the Internet by putting it into historical context. 

IT Equals IC: Networks in the Organization

In my past couple posts, I have been talking about mapping networks as the new organization chart. The concept of networks in the organization is not new. Human beings have always found ways to connect with each other through tribes, associations, work groups and many other types of networks. What is new is the speed [...]

Horizontal or Vertical: two views of the organization—which is right?

One image that we have used over and over again in recent years to explain the managerial implications of the knowledge era is depicted in this graphic. It is an abstraction of theorganization chart. Like an organization chart, the triangular figure is widerat the bottom where there are more people at the bottom working in [...]