Seth Godin: Organization, Movement, or Philosophy?

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Organization vs. movement vs. philosophy

An organization uses structure and resources and power to make things happen. Organizations hire people, issue policies, buy things, erect buildings, earn market share and get things done. Your company is probably an organization.

A movement has an emotional heart. A movement might use an organization, but it can replace systems and people if they disappear. Movements are more likely to cause widespread change, and they require leaders, not managers. The internet, it turns out, is a movement, and every time someone tries to own it, they fail.

A philosophy can survive things that might wipe out a movement and that would decimate an organization. A philosophy can skip a generation or two. It is often interpreted, and is more likely to break into autonomous groups, to morph and split and then reunite. Industrialism was a philosophy.

The trouble kicks in when you think you have one and you actually have the other.

Phi Beta Iota: Philosophy is “root” and movement is “culture.”  Organizations lacking a culture and a philosophy will generally persist in doing evil–the wrong things for the wrong reasons.  The profession of intelligence today is immature and corrupt–a mature intelligence discipline embodies philosophy and produces decision-support for social design.

See Also:

Journal: Education and the Republic

Reference: Cyber-Intelligence–Restore the Republic Of, By, and For…

Reference: Russell Ackoff on Doing Right Things Righter

Review: Philosophy and the Social Problem–The Annotated Edition

Review: Ideas and Integrities–A Spontaneous Autobiographical Disclosure

Review: Designing A World That Works For All

Review: The Design of Business–Why Design Thinking is the Next Competitive Advantage

Review: Reflexive Practice–Professional Thinking for a Turbulent World

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