This is a demonstration of how connections are made in the Networked World. And some observations about how Creativity and Destruction go hand-in-hand.
Because GameChangers followed and contributed (seven blog posts) to the narrative of the Chilean Miners…because we were curious about how the 33 miners happened to be wearing Oakley sunglasses when they emerged from the mine after their 69-day ordeal…because we made a connection with Jonathan Franklin, the correspondent for The Guardian, who was the only print journalist with complete access to the rescue site in Copiapo, and was responsible for the Oakley connection…because Penguin Press has just published Franklin’s book, 33 Men, the definitive account of the miners’ ordeal…and because a lot of companies are asking him to share his experiences and insights…
We have co-created a new GameChangers program inspired by Franklin’s observations during the 69 days at Copiapo. The program will be offered in the U.S. and Europe. We will present it for the first time on March 2, at a Global Leadership Conference sponsored by Diversey, Inc. We are rehearsing it this Sunday in New York City, when Jonathan Franklin and I will meet for the first time in person.
We cannot stress this enough: Narratives are the ultimate organizing principle in the networked economy.
Traditional news reporting and the internet made us aware of ‘Los 33.’ Social media–Facebook, Twitter, this blog, etc.–helped us track and participate in their story. Skype, email and telephone made personal conversations and collaboration between us and Jonathan Franklin possible. The Applied Improvisation Network helped us extend the program to Europe. Geo-locating apps–I can’t even tell you what they were– helped us locate and provide directions to our rehearsal studio in NYC. I used a virtual concierge to book my travel. And of course personal relationships made things possible that no technology or platform could.
Through it all, it was the narrative that guided us. With a narrative as your guide, the choice of platforms becomes an objective process, a series of consistently logical decisions. How best to participate in a narrative is an entirely different, and more productive, discussion from how best to deploy a platform. Choose narrative!
Interestingly (and typically) the mainstream media, beginning with 60 Minutes last Sunday, have focused on the more sensational aspects of the ‘Los 33′ narrative—on the fact that in their darkest hours, when they had no idea if they’d ever be found, a few of the miners began to think about cannibalism, or that since their rescue they’ve been suffering from PTSD (this is news because?…). In Where Are You Stuck? we focus on the positive aspects of the rescue. On the heroic qualities of the miners and their rescuers. Teamwork. Altriusm. Sacrifice. Leadership. Creativity.
In every crisis there is opportunity. In every crisis, there is destruction. For something to be created, something must be destroyed. Doors open and close in unison. Shiva is the god of creation AND destruction. Productive change entails creative destruction.
When the times are a-changin’, getting stuck can become a chronic problem, because individuals and organizations get frozen deciding (or avoiding deciding) how to respond to the changes they are experiencing. The challenge confronting anyone looking to get ‘unstuck’ is all about focus. Will your focus be on the creative or the destructive aspects of the change? Will you see the opportunity, or obsess on the loss? Will you bang on closed doors or walk through open ones? Will you cling to the status quo until you realize, perhaps too late, that what worked in the past isn’t necessarily what will work in the future? Interestingly, this is the challenge facing the Miners today. Working deep underground isn’t an option any more. That is a closed door. What got them out of the mineshaft isn’t the same process that will get them out of the ‘mindshafts’ in which they find themselves trapped today. When context changes, everything changes. Including the nature of heroism.
What made the Miners heroic in the eyes of the world is still within them, but like anyone else, they will have to change their game to suit their new situation. This time, unlike the 69 days they spent in the mine, they have a choice. Choosing to move consistently in the direction of creativity, opportunity and the newly-opened door is a challenge each of them will have to confront in his own way.
Check out the Where Are You Stuck? program, and fill out the response form to let us know how we can best help you.
A friend of ours working inside a large U.S.-based organization marvels at how much time gets wasted on what he calls Empty Arguments. Empty Arguments, he observes, result in too many unfocused meetings and conversations involving too many people, and require too much follow-up and clarification.
5. How to spin a story. Scripting, editing, re-writing, getting bottlenecked on approvals, and then spinning a narrative for your audience is a really Empty Argument. As much as I abhor her politics and her prideful ignorance, Sarah Palin gets a lot of credit as an improviser. The reason she can stay relevant and a beat ahead of the news cycles is that, unlike John McCain and most other politicians, she’s not scripting or trying to spin anything, she is relating to her environment in real time, in her own authentic way. It drives the liberal news spinners crazy. (President Obama does the same to the righties.) Nosy neighbor? Build a fence! When Palin makes notes on the palm of her hand during a speech, the Ivy League-educated (I do not include Brown grads in this) grademaking machines in the liberal media try to spin it as “Doesn’t do her homework.” Palin, however, knows intuitively that 90% of the people who see this image will have it made this move themselves. We can relate. The lesson: Living your narrative is more effective than trying to live up to a narrative you’ve scripted, then convincing others to buy into it, too (see Woods, Eldrick “Tiger”).
