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	<title>Thinking side-wise &#187; business analyst</title>
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		<title>The rise of the business anarchist</title>
		<link>http://sidewise.biz/2009/08/business-anarchist/</link>
		<comments>http://sidewise.biz/2009/08/business-anarchist/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2009 08:54:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>TomG</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business analyst]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business anarchist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cynefin]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[If you work in a large organisation, no doubt you&#8217;ll have analysts everywhere; you may well be one yourself. You know who they are, what they do, what part they play: financial analysts, business analysts, process analysts, quality analysts and the like, keeping track of activity, performance, change. But what about your business anarchists? Do [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you work in a large organisation, no doubt you&#8217;ll have analysts everywhere; you may well be one yourself. You know who they are, what they do, what part they play: financial analysts, business analysts, process analysts, quality analysts and the like, keeping track of activity, performance, change.</p>
<p>But what about your business anarchists? Do you know who <em>they</em> are, what <em>they</em> do, what part <em>they</em> play, in managing the overall needs of the business? And how much your business depends on them?</p>
<p>And no, I&#8217;m not joking: every business <em>does</em> have a real need for its anarchists, every bit as much as its need for its analysts. For example, take a look at the list of &#8216;<a title="Michelle Tripp '6 Essential Skills for Exponential Times'" href="http://michelletripp.com/index.php/2009/08/12/essential-skills-for-exponential-times/" target="_blank">Six Essential Skills for Exponential Times</a>&#8216;, by brand consultant and social-media strategist Michelle Tripp (and also expanded on by Burton Group consultant Mike Rollings in his post &#8216;<a title="Mike Rollings - 'What to do when waking out of an EA induced coma'" href="http://eapblog.burtongroup.com/executive_advisory_progra/2009/08/gartner-wakes-out-of-an-ea-induced-coma-2.html">What to do when waking out of an EA induced coma</a>&#8216;):</p>
<ul>
<li><strong><em>Skill #1</em>: Rule-breaking</strong> &#8211; &#8220;Rule breakers will be ready to consider possibilities that others are told &#8216;don’t make sense&#8217; or &#8216;aren&#8217;t the way things are done around here.&#8217;&#8221;</li>
<li><strong><em>Skill #2</em>: Entrepreneurial</strong> &#8211; &#8220;Seeking out new opportunities and new ways of connecting and creating &#8230; finding them even when there isn’t an available mentor or an established path.&#8221;</li>
<li><strong><em>Skill #3</em>: Self-Educating</strong> &#8211; &#8220;More proactive than ever in learning independently and not relying on structured programs &#8230; don’t sit back and wait to be taught &#8230; searching for information and charting their own educational course.&#8221;</li>
<li><strong><em>Skill #4</em>: Bonding</strong> &#8211; &#8220;Bonding will be a matter of how much value you can provide to the people you’ve promised it to. &#8230; Those bonds can be through adding value to people’s lives through technology, information, guidance, validation, or friendship.&#8221;</li>
<li><strong><em>Skill #5</em>: Revolutionary</strong> &#8211; &#8220;Revolutionaries are at the forefront, creating the future. &#8230; Brains that thrive on change, innovation and invention, high information uptake, and leveraging technologies are geared for the future.&#8221;</li>
<li><strong><em>Skill #6</em>: Visionary</strong> &#8211; &#8220;Everything is changing faster than ever. &#8230; Having the skill of vision allows you to imagine what’s possible, imagine what’s next, and predict the needs and values of tomorrow.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p>In short, the skills of <strong><em>thinking side-wise</em></strong>.</p>
<p>These aren&#8217;t the skills that we would expect from an analyst: far from it, in fact. In <a title="Wikipedia on Cynefin" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynefin" target="_blank">Cynefin</a> terms, the tasks of an analyst sit squarely in the squarely in the domain of the &#8216;Complicated&#8217; &#8211; calm, calculated, everything according to the rules. Which works just fine as long as everything stays much the same. But when the world changes, becomes uncertain &#8211; when we move into the Cynefin domain of the &#8216;Chaotic&#8217;, where the assumptions that underpin the analyst&#8217;s so-certain rules no longer apply &#8211; those analyst-skills may well be worse than useless, giving us nominal &#8216;right answers&#8217; to what turn out in practice to be the wrong questions. That&#8217;s when we need a very different set of skills, to find out what questions we <em>really</em> need to ask. That&#8217;s when we need those skills above; that&#8217;s when we need people who are comfortable with the chaos and confusion of change. That, in short, is when we need our business-anarchists.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t worry: we&#8217;re not talking about &#8216;kiddies-anarchy&#8217; here &#8211; pointless disruption for disruption&#8217;s sake, or the classic student stupidity of &#8220;all property must be liberated, but don&#8217;t you dare touch <em>my</em> stuff!&#8221;. There&#8217;s no <em>discipline</em> there, no awareness of personal responsibility in a complex social context. Instead, each of those skills above have their own distinct disciplines, and, like the analysts&#8217; skills, will rely on many years&#8217;-worth of experience to do well. The catch is that, as the Cynefin model demonstrates, the business-anarchist&#8217;s disciplines and experience are <em>structurally</em> different from those of the analyst &#8211; so if we try to measure them in the same terms as for the analyst, we&#8217;ll be in deep trouble straight away.</p>
<p>What we need from an analyst is <em>depth</em> of experience, in what marketers would call a <em>vertical</em> domain. Analysts are <em>specialists</em> &#8211; many years of practice in a single domain, steadily developing their skills and, especially, their speed at the work. As Cynefin shows, the core tactic is &#8216;sense / analyse / respond&#8217;, and the key driver is a kind of &#8216;outer truth&#8217;, with that &#8216;truth&#8217; identifiable in concrete, repeatable terms. In that sense, the analyst&#8217;s performance is relatively easy to measure, and the tasks easy to monitor, too.</p>
<p>But what we need from an anarchist is <em>breadth</em> of experience &#8211; <em>horizontal</em> rather than vertical. Anarchists are <em>generalists</em> &#8211; many years of practice at connecting <em>across</em> multiple domains, cross-fertilising, creating conversations between them, linking different ideas and experiences via analogy and metaphor. Yet here the key drivers are principles or values, and, as Cynefin shows, the core tactic is &#8216;act / sense / respond&#8217; &#8211; we have to <em>do something</em> to shake things up enough to sense what&#8217;s going on and which way to go. So performance is hard to measure, because there are no clear rules to measure against; and tasks are difficult to predefine, too, because by its nature much of the work deals with inherent uncertainty. Tricky&#8230;</p>
<p>Generalists are the &#8216;glue&#8217; that hold the organisation together: without them, there would be no end-to-end processes, nothing of practical <em>use</em> towards the organisation&#8217;s aims. But another problem here is that the generalist&#8217;s experience in any single domain will <em>necessarily</em> be less than those of an equivalent specialist who&#8217;s worked only within that one domain: so the generalist will almost always come off worst in any single skill-for-skill comparison &#8211; often leading to some very misleading performance measures. Worse, if most of our measures are &#8216;vertical&#8217; (as they usually are in large organisations), then, according to those measures, the more that generalists do their real work of &#8216;horizontal&#8217; connection, the less they&#8217;ll appear to do &#8211; which again can lead to some very misleading ideas about performance, with less-skilled generalists appearing to do more work than the most experienced ones. Tricky indeed&#8230;</p>
<p>So when do you need those business-anarchists? Who on your existing staff would be good at this kind of role &#8211; or already is? How can you tell the good from the not-so-good? And what support would they need from you to do that role well?</p>
<p><strong>When do you need business-anarchists, and for what purpose?</strong></p>
<p>When the world is certain, you don&#8217;t need an anarchist shaking things up: that&#8217;s when you&#8217;d be better to stick to plain ol&#8217; everyday analysis. But fact is that the business world is <em>not</em> certain &#8211; especially not at the present time, where stability is more the exception than the norm, and where the roller-coaster-ness of the ride sometimes seems to get rougher by the day. Whether you like it or not, you&#8217;re going to <em>need</em> people who thrive on coping with chaos &#8211; the business-anarchists.</p>
<p>The trick here is to identify what changes, and what doesn&#8217;t &#8211; which is where business-architecture and enterprise-architecture would come into the picture, because those are key tools to help you tell the difference. Where things don&#8217;t change, or don&#8217;t change much &#8211; and there&#8217;s still a lot of those, even in the most innovative business &#8211; stick to the analysis: don&#8217;t rock the boat just for the sake of doing so. Efficiency will always matter; so will operations excellence. Use statistics and the rest wherever appropriate. But remember that statistical analysis only works well when you&#8217;re dealing with large numbers of things that are exactly the same &#8211; or supposed to be the same: for example, by definition, <a title="Wikipedia on Six Sigma" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_Sigma" target="_blank">Six Sigma</a> makes little sense unless you&#8217;re dealing with literally millions of identical events. If the products or tasks have a high degree of inherent variance, or have any significant &#8216;one-off&#8217; elements, you&#8217;ll need to apply anarchist-like approaches to those parts that change.</p>
<p><strong>Who would do this work well?</strong></p>
<p>Look for the natural generalists on your staff: the people who can get interested in <em>anything</em>, and like making connections between different domains, different levels of abstraction, different professions, different people. You need people with both breadth <em>and</em> depth, and intimate knowledge of your industry and context: outside consultants may help, but experienced &#8216;insiders&#8217; usually have the most to offer.</p>
<p>Natural talents and tendencies  may help: for example, people with <a title="Wikipedia on Myers-Briggs (MBTI)" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myers-Briggs_Type_Indicator" target="_blank">Myers-Briggs</a> <em>x</em>N<em>x</em>P &#8216;types&#8217; may tend to think and act in an anarchist mode by nature. But much more important is <em>experience</em>: people need to know &#8216;the rules&#8217;, and know them well, in order to understand how and when and why to bend them to make things work better.</p>
<p><strong>What are the critical success factors?</strong></p>
<p>Analysis depends on the quality of algorithms and data. By contrast, the business-anarchist depends on the clarity of the organisation&#8217;s <em>principles</em> and <em>values</em>, to act as the beacon or &#8216;guiding star&#8217; in conditions of inherent uncertainty. Use a structured framework such as <a title="Slidepack - 'Vision, Role, Mission, Goal'" href="http://www.slideshare.net/tetradian/vision-role-mission-goal-a-framework-for-business-motivation" target="_blank"><em>vision, role, mission, goal</em></a> to aid in anchoring those principles into everyday practice.</p>
<p>As above, <em>experience</em> is a key factor here &#8211; especially experience across a wide range of domains, and at every different level of those domains. Unlike analysis, theory alone is not enough here: it also needs to be grounded in practice, in hands-on experience, yet also with enough awareness to be able to break out of the &#8220;do it the way we&#8217;ve always done it&#8221; trap.</p>
<p>And there also needs to be <em>discipline</em> in moving between the domains: a dilettante &#8216;scattergun&#8217; approach to new ideas will not be enough, especially in developing sustainable business-anarchist skills over the longer term. (See <a title="'Disciplines' reference-sheet" href="http://tetradianbooks.com/2008/09/disciplines-ref/">here</a> for a &#8216;cheat-sheet&#8217; on moving between disciplines in a rather different set of skills: the domains may seem strange at first, but the same principles do apply even in everyday business.)</p>
<p><strong>What support do your business-anarchists need from you?</strong></p>
<p>In a context where things are inherently uncertain, we need to make it safe to fail, or at least safe to seem to &#8216;not-succeed&#8217; in the expected way. Where &#8216;command and control&#8217; would require everything to be &#8216;fail-safe&#8217;, here we need to allow for <em>safe-fail</em> &#8211; for &#8216;graceful failure&#8217;, for practice-space, for fallback to a known recovery condition, and so on. The purpose of an experiment is to <em>learn</em>, to probe into the unknown (the &#8216;emergent&#8217; domain, in Cynefin terms) so as to arrive at some new understanding &#8211; so if we only allow so-called &#8216;experiments&#8217; that will tell us what we already know, we fail before we start.</p>
<p>You will only get appropriate innovation happening within the business if you make it safe for people to &#8216;fail&#8217;. Simple as that.</p>
<p>Your business-anarchists also need <em>protection</em> in several different senses, often right up at the executive levels:</p>
<ul>
<li>business-anarchists must necessarily <em>break the rules</em>: to do their work, they will need official sanction to &#8216;break the rules&#8217; appropriately</li>
<li>business-anarchists and other generalists must often <em>bridge across the silos</em>, necessarily breaking through bureacractic boundaries: they&#8217;ll often need formal authority to do this</li>
<li>by definition, cross-functional generalists will usually have <em>multiple reporting-relationships</em>, often skipping over or sidestepping the &#8216;normal&#8217; hierarchies: they&#8217;ll need protection from possibly-disgruntled managers in order to do this</li>
</ul>
<p>Hence another clear, simple point: you will only gain business value from your business-anarchists and other generalists if you make it safe for them to do their work.</p>
<p>And in the same way that, in Six Sigma and the like, <em>everyone</em> is an analyst, everyone needs to be an anarchist in their own way too. Many innovative companies allocate work-time for everyone to explore their own new ideas and new business practices: India&#8217;s Tata Group, for example, allot <em>everyone</em> an hour a day for personal experiments, whilst at Google and 3M it&#8217;s the equivalent of a full day each week. Sure, most experiments may well go nowhere: but those that do succeed bring huge returns that repay that &#8216;wasted&#8217; work-time many, many times over &#8211; and it took a real &#8216;anarchist&#8217; mindset to turned a &#8216;failed&#8217; experimental glue at 3M into the almost immeasurable business success that is the ubiquitous Post-It® note.</p>
<p>So who are your business-anarchists? And how can you help them do their work, to help create your company&#8217;s success? A question that&#8217;s worth pondering in practice, perhaps&#8230;?</p>
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