| Volume 4, Issue 2 - February, 2005
Guide for Visionary Leaders and Business Decision-makers
In the January issue of Taking Aim, I reported on the book Margin.
That book triggered some thoughts that had been floating in and out of my consciousness for some time. In fact I had even created the topic
“Cycle of Specialization” several years ago, but just couldn’t quite get my thoughts to gel in any cohesive manner. This
then is an attempt to put into words those thoughts and how it affects us as visionary leaders and business decision-makers.
There is a Cycle of Specialization that has repeated itself over the centuries. It has been difficult to spot because the cycles have frequently
been far apart, but the pace is quickening. Our society is being driven to a more rapid rate of change in the cycle by the growth in population,
technology and information.
The cycle begins with prehistoric man and his work to survive. He had to be a vertical supplier to his own survival. He was responsible for his
own food, shelter, water, and protection. He was dependent upon himself for his own survival. As time went on, he invented language and traveled
in groups or tribes. These groups started to specialize. Some would hunt while others would drive the game to the hunters or cook the food
and as that happened; each specialization became vertical in their specialty. The hunter prepared his own equipment for hunting and the cooks
developed their own tools for cooking. Things changed very little for thousands of years. Certainly the villages changed and farming became
a specialty and each farmer in turn became vertical in his specialty and developed his own tools. With the advent of farming came the permanent
establishment of villages and a new range of specialties developed. Craftsmen developed who specialized in spinning wool, weaving cloth, making
clothes, making shoes etc. Each craftsman again had to be a vertical supplier of tools and technology to his own craft. This knowledge was
passed along via apprenticeships and the cycle continued.
Today, as was pointed out in Margin, we are undergoing exponential change and with that, we are also undergoing
exponential specialization. As a researcher, it is easy for me to point to the work the government has undertaken to modernize the old Standard
Industrial Classification (S.I.C.) codes to cover the new products and services that were not in existence when the codes were created. Another
great example comes to mind having just gone through the traditional year-end review of the news. 2004 was for many the year of the blogger.
Ten years ago the Internet was still in its infancy, there was no E-Commerce let alone bloggers. (My spell checker still doesn’t recognize
the word blogger.)
Another area of incredible specialization is Health Care. It wasn’t that many years ago that if I didn’t feel well, I went to my doctor
and he prescribed something to help me. Today my family doctor is nothing more than a gatekeeper. When I don’t feel well now, I go to see him
to find out whom to see to treat my problem.
Our efforts to improve our competitiveness with LEAN and Continuous Improvement are so internally focused that we are creating even more specialists
to delve into the minutia of processes at a level previously unthinkable.
Specialization creates information, which requires more specialization creating an unending Cycle of Specialization devoted to continuous improvement
of the product or service. (I am not certain which came first, specialization or information, but the cycle continues.)
With rampant specialization taking place in all areas of our lives, the information that is available to us has increased by a factor of 10,000.
If we are to do the best for our organizations, it is imperative that visionary leaders and business decision-makers expand their knowledge accordingly.
They must increase data input capabilities and speed up the decision-making process to keep pace.
The question is, “Can we change that quickly?” History suggests that we have remained genetically unchanged through thousands of years
and it takes a minimum of a million years to affect and change us. We can’t wait that long to address the gap between the exponential specialization
and our human capabilities. If we agree that our future depends on our ability to learn faster than our competition and we recognize our own individual
limitations, then the only solution lies in increasing the human talent available to our organizations.
I am not talking about a specialist who is internally focused and going to generate more information further complicating our already overly complicated
lives, but rather a generalist who is externally focused and capable of leading teams of specialists at all levels in the organization. Someone with
creative talent, a solid foundation in basics and a uniqueness of thought capable of taking a project from start to finish, thereby lessening the
load on you the visionary leader and business decision-maker.
Large, prosperous organizations may be able to add this type of talent to their staff, but there are potential problems in this approach. First,
it is costly. Second, these people need to be constantly challenged. Third and possibly most important is that the longer they stay with the organization
the more they are likely to develop an internal perspective and thereby diminish their effectiveness to the organization.
Consequently, the challenges for organizations large and small are the same. Where do we find this kind of talent? How do we utilize this talent
and have them maintain an external perspective?
After much introspection and thought, I have decided the solution lies in hiring talent on a project-by-project basis. The specifications
for this talent include real world experience leading projects from inception to successful completion. The talent must have a track record
of working with and through people as well as exhibiting creativity and the potential for original thinking. Obviously this person needs to
be a good communicator. If you have followed my logic this far, then what you need is a “Consultant.”
By now, some of you may have found some of the changes we made to the Cannon Advantage website towards the end of last year. We have some
more changes planned for the coming months, but right now, I would like to point out the new page created in support of our speaking program.
We have added a Meeting Resource page that links to the Program
page. This page is to help meeting planners specifically, but potentially may be beneficial to consulting clients and prospects as well. It
includes links to my promotional One Sheet, testimonials, speaking client list, pre-program questionnaire, printable photo, sample introduction
and contact information. We have also included the Search Feature for planners to quickly find articles that I have written on subjects of
interest to them. At the bottom right you will also find our “Refer this site to a friend” link. Feel free to use this to send
this page to people you think might be interested in a seminar or workshop on any of the topics you have read about in Taking
Aim.
If you have a subject that you would like to see covered in future issues of “Taking Aim,” please send me an email at aim@CannonAdvantage.com.
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Robert E. Cannon
Management Consultant
175 Sorrelwood Lane,
Chagrin Falls,
OH 44022 USA
866.598.8450 phone/v-mail
440.338.7159 facsimile
aim@cannonadvantage.com
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"Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature, nor do the children of men as a whole experience it. Avoiding danger is
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is finished when it surrenders."
Ben Stein
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