Free learning videos (3 of 6)
The third in a series of six open-access videos to help you create a future-fit culture
“He that will not apply new remedies must expect new evils; for time is the greatest innovator.” — Sir Francis Bacon (1625) 1
How can you go about creating the kind of future-fit culture of innovation, agility, and adaptiveness your organisation needs if it’s to thrive in an increasingly uncertain and unpredictable world?
This is the third in a series of six short, free access videos to help you answer that question in ways that work in your unique organisational circumstances.
In case you missed any of the previous videos, view them via the links you’ll find towards to end of this post.
The videos will be relevant to:
practitioners engaged in catalysing cultural transformation
aspiring future-fit culture catalysts
executives championing, sponsoring, and supporting cultural transformation
Video 3 - 2D3D Mindsets are at the Heart of Future-Fit Cultures of Innovation, Agility, and Adaptiveness (5 mins 23s)
One of the fundamental characteristics of being human is that we each form our own unique, individual perspectives on reality.
Each of our perspectives is inherently incomplete, biased, and one-sided — in effect, all we each ever have is a two dimensional — or 2D — take on the bigger picture three dimensional — or 3D — reality.
The video below lays out why 2D3D mindsets are the essential foundation for creating a future-fit culture of innovation, agility, and adaptiveness.
Previous posts in the series
Video 1 of 6 (1 min 33s) addressed the need to encourage diversity of perspectives whilst avoiding organisational fragmentation. It described how diversity of people’s perspectives, thinking, and outlook is the lifeblood of innovation, agility, and adaptiveness. However, the challenge with diversity is it also significantly increases the risk of misunderstandings, mistakes, and missed opportunities. Video 1 described the nature of the challenge, and its general solution. Catch up on Video 1 via the button below:
Video 2 of 6 (3 min 47s) addressed the challenge of overcoming fiefdoms, factions and silos. It described how, over time, different areas in an organisation tend towards entrenched localised perspectives. This encourages fragmentation, which is the number one organisational barrier to innovation, agility, and adaptiveness. Video 2 explored why this happens and how to systemically prevent it. Catch up on Video 2 via the button below:
From essay, Of Innovations (1625). As collected and translated in The Works of Francis Bacon (1765), Vol. 1, 479.