Innovation DNA

In over the years, it’s become increasingly clear to me that organizations do not have innovation DNA. They don’t have adaptability DNA. This realization inevitably led me back to a fundamental question: what problem was management invented to solve, anyway?

When you read the history of management and of early pioneers like Frederick Taylor, you realize that management was designed to solve a very specific problem—how to do things with perfect replicability, at ever-increasing scale and steadily increasing efficiency.

Now there’s a new set of challenges on the horizon. How do you build organizations that are as nimble as change itself? How do you mobilize and monetize the imagination of every employee, every day? How do you create organizations that are highly engaging places to work in? And these challenges simply can’t be met without reinventing our 100-year-old management model.

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Info su Gilberto Romboli

Laurea in Fisica alla Università di Bologna con una tesi teorica sullo studio delle dislocazioni di grandi masse, diploma MBA presso la Alma Graduate School. Mi occupo professionalmente e per passione di innovazione in tutte le sue coniugazioni.
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