Organisational amnesia - is it safe to let go yet?
The UK is having a bonfire today, well ahead of the usual Guy Fawkes Night celebrations. The Bonfire of the Quangos will be abolishing somewhere in the region of 180 QUasi-Autonomous Non-Governmental Organisations today in a bid to cut costs and reduce the confusion around these organisations. The arguments for and against are being well-rehearsed - arguments for tending to be Quango-specific, while arguments against being more generic.
It's not unusual for quangos - and departments or taskforces or... - to outlive their usefulness, but it can take a brave person to take the decision to close them. Unless a turning point is reached - such as a new administration looking to reduce costs, complexity and government size - and distinguish itself dramatically from its predecessor.
But often there is a working assumption that there is a good (or at least expedient) reason that the quango was created in the first place. And, if you don't know why it was created in the first place, you'll be reluctant to call time on it - there may be some crucial piece that you may miss.
Organisational amnesia can obstruct decision-making.
It's one of the reasons why any large organisation needs some way of building an organisational memory. Particularly if senior levels are populated with secondments or external candidates - people who haven't risen within the organisation itself and therefore learned its particular histories.
It used to be part of the unspoken role of the informal network, of apprenticeships, of long-standing (if not actually senior) employees - that they would naturally share stories of what had happened previously - stories that carry the context and reasoning, the thinking processes and the lessons implicitly. But that's less and less the case now - fewer people stay on as long, more take early redundancy - and the organisational memory atrophies.
We've seen it with clients - one organisation had departments that no-one could quite understand why it was there, departments that seemed to give the overall organisation a mis-shapen feel. But senior staff were traditionally rotated in from other parts of the parent organisation for a period of a few years, then rotated out again. So none of them knew the reasoning for the odd departments - and few, despite their being good leaders and managers in other ways, were willing to be the one that turned round and axed a department when they weren't going to be around for long anyway.
Interestingly, at lower levels of the organisation - the workers rather than managers - there was organisational memory and understanding. The trick was to create mechanisms by which it was conveyed - and heard - by the senior people.
- Narrative (100)
- Organisational culture (95)
- Communications (93)
- Complexity (77)
- SenseMaker (77)
- Changing organisations (42)
- Cognitive Edge (37)
- Narrate news (35)
- narrative research (32)
- Cognitive science (25)
- Tools and techniques (25)
- Conference references (24)
- Recommendations (20)
- datespecific (20)
- Leadership (17)
- Employee engagement (16)
- Storytelling (15)
- Culture (13)
- Events (11)
- UNDP (11)
- Cynefin (10)
- hints and tips (10)
- internal communications (8)
- Engagement (7)
- Knowledge (6)
- M&E (6)
- customer insight (6)
- tony quinlan (6)
- Branding (5)
- Stories (5)
- culture change (5)
- Children of the World (4)
- Dave Snowden (4)
- Changing organisations (3)
- Courses (3)
- GirlHub (3)
- Medinge (3)
- Travel (3)
- anecdote circles (3)
- development (3)
- knowledge management (3)
- merger (3)
- micro-narratives (3)
- monitoring and evaluation (3)
- presentations (3)
- BRAC (2)
- Bratislava (2)
- Egypt (2)
- ILO (2)
- Narattive research (2)
- Roma (2)
- Uncategorized (2)
- VECO (2)
- citizen engagement (2)
- corporate culture (2)
- counter-terrorism (2)
- customer satisfaction (2)
- diversity (2)
- governance (2)
- impact measurement (2)
- innovation (2)
- masterclass (2)
- melcrum (2)
- monitoring (2)
- narrate (2)
- organisation culture (2)
- organisational storytelling (2)
- research (2)
- sensemaker case study (2)
- sensemaking (2)
- social networks (2)
- speaker (2)
- strategy (2)
- workshops (2)
- 2012 Olympics (1)
- Adam Curtis (1)
- Allders of Sutton (1)
- CASE (1)
- Cabinets and the Bomb (1)
- Central Library (1)
- Chernobyl (1)
- Christmas (1)
- Disaster relief (1)
- Duncan Green (1)
- ESRC (1)
- Employee surveys (1)
- European commission (1)
- Fail-safe (1)
- Financial Times anecdote circles SenseMaker (1)
- FlashForward (1)
- Fragments of Impact (1)
- Future Backwards (1)
- GRU (1)
- Girl Research Unit (1)
- House of Lords (1)
- Huffington Post (1)
- IQPC (1)
- Jordan (1)
- Joshua Cooper Ramo (1)
- KM (1)
- KMUK2010 (1)
- Kharian and Box (1)
- LFI (1)
- LGComms (1)
- Lant Pritchett (1)
- Learning From Incidents (1)
- Lords Speaker lecture (1)
- MLF (1)
- MandE (1)
- Montenegro (1)
- Mosaic (1)
- NHS (1)
- ODI (1)
- OTI (1)
- Owen Barder (1)
- PR (1)
- Peter Hennessy (1)
- Pfizer (1)
- Protected Areas (1)
- Rwanda (1)
- SenseMaker® collector ipad app (1)
- Serbia (1)
- Sir Michael Quinlan (1)
- Slides (1)
- Speaking (1)
- Sutton (1)
- TheStory (1)
- UK justice (1)
- USS vincennes (1)
- United Nations Development Programme (1)
- Washington storytelling (1)
- acquisition (1)
- adaptive management (1)
- afghanistan (1)
- aid and development (1)
- al-qaeda (1)
- algeria (1)
- all in the mind (1)
- anthropology (1)
- applications (1)
- back-story (1)
- better for less (1)
- case study (1)
- change communications (1)
- change management (1)
- citizen experts (1)
- communication (1)
- communications research (1)
- complaints (1)
- complex adaptive systems (1)
- complex probes (1)
- conference (1)
- conferences (1)
- conspiracy theories (1)
- consultation (1)
- content management (1)
- corporate values (1)
- counter narratives (1)
- counter-insurgency (1)
- counter-narrative (1)
- creativity (1)
- customer research (1)
- deresiewicz (1)
- deterrence (1)
- dissent (1)
- downloads (1)
- education (1)
- employee (1)
- ethical audit (1)
- ethics (1)
- evaluation (1)
- facilitation (1)
- fast company (1)
- feedback loops (1)
- financial services (1)
- financial times (1)
- four yorkshiremen (1)
- gary klein (1)
- georgia (1)
- girl effect (1)
- girleffect (1)
- giving voice (1)
- globalgiving (1)
- harnessing complexity (1)
- impact evaluation (1)
- impact measures (1)
- information overload (1)
- informatology (1)
- innovative communications (1)
- john kay (1)
- justice (1)
- kcuk (1)
- keynote (1)
- leadership recession communication (1)
- learning (1)
- libraries (1)
- likert scale (1)
- lucifer effect (1)
- marketing (1)
- minimum level of failure (1)
- narrative capture (1)
- narrative sensemaker internal communications engag (1)
- natasha mitchell (1)
- navigating complexity (1)
- new york times (1)
- newsletter (1)
- obliquity (1)
- organisation (1)
- organisational development (1)
- organisational memory (1)
- organisational narrative (1)
- patterns (1)
- pilot projects (1)
- placement (1)
- policy-making (1)
- population research (1)
- presentation (1)
- protocols of the elders of zion. (1)
- public policy (1)
- public relations (1)
- qualitative research (1)
- quangos (1)
- relations (1)
- reputation management (1)
- resilience (1)
- revenge (1)
- ritual dissent (1)
- road signs (1)
- safe-fail (1)
- safe-to-fail experiments (1)
- sales improvement (1)
- satisfaction (1)
- scaling (1)
- seminar (1)
- seth godin (1)
- social coherence (1)
- social cohesion (1)
- solitude (1)
- stakeholder understanding (1)
- strategic communications management (1)
- strategic narrative (1)
- suggestion schemes (1)
- surveys (1)
- survivorship bias (1)
- targets (1)
- tbilisi (1)
- the future backwards (1)
- tipping point (1)
- training (1)
- twitter (1)
- upskilling (1)
- values (1)
- video (1)
- voices (1)
- weak links (1)
- zeno's paradox (1)
- November 2024 (1)
- October 2024 (1)
- September 2024 (2)
- March 2020 (1)
- November 2019 (1)
- August 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (2)
- April 2019 (1)
- November 2018 (2)
- May 2018 (2)
- March 2018 (1)
- February 2018 (1)
- December 2017 (1)
- October 2017 (3)
- September 2017 (1)
- July 2017 (1)
- March 2016 (1)
- February 2016 (1)
- January 2016 (1)
- July 2015 (3)
- May 2015 (1)
- March 2015 (2)
- February 2015 (1)
- December 2014 (1)
- November 2014 (1)
- September 2014 (3)
- August 2014 (1)
- July 2014 (2)
- June 2014 (6)
- May 2014 (3)
- April 2014 (3)
- March 2014 (5)
- January 2014 (4)
- December 2013 (2)
- October 2013 (1)
- August 2013 (1)
- June 2013 (1)
- May 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (1)
- January 2013 (2)
- November 2012 (2)
- October 2012 (4)
- September 2012 (3)
- November 2011 (3)
- August 2011 (1)
- July 2011 (1)
- May 2011 (4)
- April 2011 (3)
- March 2011 (4)
- February 2011 (8)
- January 2011 (8)
- December 2010 (2)
- November 2010 (5)
- October 2010 (8)
- September 2010 (5)
- August 2010 (2)
- June 2010 (1)
- April 2010 (2)
- January 2010 (1)
- December 2009 (2)
- November 2009 (3)
- October 2009 (1)
- January 2009 (1)
- July 2008 (4)
- June 2008 (1)
- March 2008 (2)
- January 2008 (3)
- November 2007 (4)
- October 2007 (1)
- September 2007 (1)
- August 2007 (4)
- May 2007 (3)
- March 2007 (1)
- February 2007 (6)
- January 2007 (3)
- November 2006 (8)
- October 2006 (8)
- September 2006 (2)
- August 2006 (5)
- July 2006 (13)
Subscribe by email
You May Also Like
These Related Stories