A Requisite Failure to Communicate – A Friday Funny

By Michelle Malay Carter on April 24, 2009 

Requisite Organization Efficiency in Language One of the greatest benefit our clients receive by adopting a Requisite Organization Leadership Framework is a common language to be able to talk about talent assessment, high potentials, and organization design.? It allows them to diagnose issues quickly and design work enabling organizations. Who is Right? I’ve said before, […]

Filed Under High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 1 Comment

Requisite Organization – Endlessly Misunderstood

By Michelle Malay Carter on April 21, 2009 

Requisite Organization is a meta-model created by Elliott Jaques.? When people oppose it, I generally find their opposition to be based upon misunderstanding. A client who is undergoing a Requisite Organization implementation received the following question from an employee, and I helped craft a response.? Hierarchy bashing is en vogue these days, but what is […]

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Role Analysis, Time Span of Discretion, and Requisite Work Levels

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 26, 2009 

Universal Measures and Understanding Properties of Work?Allows for Informed Organizational Design I’ve often said that understanding work levels allows us to do organizational engineering because we can use our knowledge to make predictions and design accordingly.? Just like we can predict when H2O will change to ice or steam as we raise or lower the […]

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Why Can’t We Figure Out How to Select Leaders?

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 16, 2009 

Jim Heskett at Harvard Business’ Working Knowledge has another question up for comments:? Why Can’t We Figure Out How to Select Leaders? My Answer is Simple It is because we don’t understand work or the variations in humans’ ability to perform work.? When we try to match leaders to jobs, we are like 18th century […]

Filed Under Executive Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 4 Comments

The Amazing Talent Management Solution Calculator – A Friday Funny

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 5, 2009 

Finally,?we can do talent management strictly by the numbers.??Just imagine, solutions based upon an amazing,?recently discovered,?ancient Chinese algorithm. Sweet Success Organizations the world over are finding their way back to health, prosperity, and employee engagement after choosing the solution suggested via the algorithm. Instructions: -Choose your most pressing problem from the list below: Our engagement […]

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Who Is To Blame for Low Employee Engagement? Executive Leadership

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 3, 2009 

If a wooden bridge collapsed under the weight of a truck, you wouldn’t blame the wood.? You wouldn’t blame the truck.? You would blame the engineer. Organizational Engineering – An Executive Leadership Level Accountability Who is engineering our organizations these days, and upon what scientific principles are they basing their designs?? We have yet to […]

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Faulty Organization Design or Worse Yet, Design by Default – A Friday Funny

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 30, 2009 

I worked with an engineering firm this week doing job analysis and talent assessment work.? Whenever this firm hires degreed engineers, some straight from college, some with experience, they still put them through two years of internal training to learn their specific industry before they can work independently within the organization. A Field in Need […]

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Face to the Customer Organization Design – A Critical Decision. Farewell to Circuit City

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 25, 2009 

A Solid Relationship Two decades ago when I graduated from college and moved 10 hours from home with nothing more than what would fit in my car, Circuit City and I built a relationship.? As my paycheck would allow, I would visit my favorite salesperson, Darren, and add electronic items to my entertainment center.? I […]

Filed Under Accountability, Executive Leadership, Felt Fair Compensation, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management, Work Levels | 4 Comments

The World May Be Flat, But Organizations Shouldn’t Be

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 21, 2009 

In my last post, I said all work levels have something to contribute to the organization.? When organizations intentionally structure themselves?to be flat, they tend to leave out work level 3.? When de-layering was en vogue, sometimes organizations cut too much, and level 3 was often the layer cut that should not have been. What […]

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How Does Requisite Organization Integrate with Your Model?

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 11, 2009 

I taught a public course, Introduction to Requisite Organization, last week.? Each time I teach this course, people ask me – How does this apply to X? (insert your favorite model)? My standard answer is:? Requisite Organization will inform your model.? How Can I Make This Bold Assertion? Because the two theory pieces which form […]

Filed Under Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 3 Comments

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