Index

POET

Items

Architecture and Engineering

Yin and Yang
Architect Horizontally Engineer Vertically
Overlap
Inter Phase

Culture

Organisation Structure

Management
Workers

Culture Trumps Everything

For Better or Worse
The Power of Culture
Immense Problems
Immense Opportunities

Slaves to Psychology

What Do You Think
Is All Value Easy to See
I Was Only Doing What I was Told
Are You Better Than a 5 Year Old
Who Decides
Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely
Style over Substance
The Halo Horn Effect
Cognitive Dissonance
The Dunning Kruger Effect
The Peter Principle
The Matthew Effect
Prices Law
The Best Managers Are Sociopaths
Personality Traits
The Prisons of Two Ideas
Logical Fallacies

Architects and Engineers

Fundamentals
Comparison
Architects and Engineers Who Are You

The Architect

Secrets
An Impossible Job
What Does An Architect Do
Architect or Charlatan
The Pragmatic Architect Creed
Language

PEAF

Adoption

Step 5
Actions
Prepare Culture Change
Step 6
Actions
Rollout Culture Change

Culture

The Management vs The Workers

Most Valued Player MVP
Comparison

IT vs The Business

Is IT Special

What vs How
Yes But Not Because its IT
When Two Tribes Go To War
Should IT Ever Say No to The Business
Comparison
       
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- PB-CULTURE


POET>Culture>Slaves-to-Psychology>I-Was-Only-Doing-What-I-was-Told ◄◄◄           .           ►►► POET>Culture>Slaves-to-Psychology>Who-Decides

The Marshmallow Test

An experiment conducted in 1972 by Walter Mischel of Stanford University sought to determine if deferred gratification can be an indicator of future success.

Children, aged four to six, were taken into a room where a marshmallow was placed on the table in front of them. Before leaving each of the children alone in the room, the examiner told them they would receive a second marshmallow if the first was still on the table after 15 minutes. One-third deferred gratification long enough to receive the second marshmallow. In follow-up studies, Mischel found that those who deferred gratification were significantly more competent and received higher SAT scores than their peers, meaning that this characteristic likely remains with a person for life.

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Keypoint

Adopt this component by...

short-term gratification (quick wins) most often leads to long-term failure.

Delaying short-term gratification, most often leads to long-term success.

C-Suite: Mandate that people favour future benefits over short-term gratification. If you want to pick low hanging fruit, you first have to plant a tree.

Questions to ponder...

Do people in your Enterprise concentrate more on short-term benefit rather than long-term benefit?

Can you think of examples where this has happened in the past?

Who were they? What was the impact? Why do you think they acted in this way?

What needs to change to reduce the likelihood of it happening in the future?

Who needs to drive that change?

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