Three essentials of self-steering

As we mentioned earlier prof. Jan De Visch held an interesting lecture about self steering, at the event of february 8, organized by the Argonauts and Unizo, and sponsored by Participium.

This is what we learned from prof. Jan De Visch.

There are three essentials of self steering

  1. Organize around the customer and organize around the customer’s value streams. The client will dictate your organization.
  2. Grow in how your organization develops its internal cooperation. Everyone has two jobs: the main task and the task to cooperate with others. Developing job 2 is key for the future success.
  3. In search of the operating model that fits best with the DNA of your organization. This is the canvas Jan De Visch has developed to illustrate the strengths and focus points of all of the new working models. There is no one size fits all … every organization has to look for its own way of working (together).

Download Jan De Visch’ presentation (in Dutch)

Jan de Visch knows when and why self-steering will be successful (or not)

From many years of experience in changing organisational structures professor Jan De Visch from Flanders Business School has gathered a number of indicators for the success of self-steering. “If the stretch is too big, it will certainly not work, so I always recommend starting with one aspect when laying the foundation for self-management”, says De Visch. A short survey suffices to quickly assess whether your organization is ready to start with self-steering.

That was the subject of the evening session about the chances of success with regard to introducing self-management. This evening session is part of a series on self-management organized by The Argonauts. Another session on how to recruit, grow and retain self-managed employees follows 31st May. The focal point of this is a two-day bus trip in October through a number of companies that have successfully introduced self-management. Participium supports these sessions because we take the subject seriously and think about introducing self-management in our own company.

Download Jan’s presentation (Dutch pdf)

 

How to predict the success of self-management in your organisation?

How to centralize the customer, break silos and create upward team dynamics? What level of collaborative intelligence should you aim for?

These and many other questions will be answered 22nd March from 18.30h to 22.00h at Urban City, Ankerrui 9, 2000 Antwerpen where The Argonauts organise an info session on the future of work in cooperation with Participium, Vivaldis and Unizo.

You’ll learn how to predict the success of self-managament in your organisation, and how to establish feedback mechanisms for self- management: flexible planning mechanisms and dashboards.

More info and registration

 

Practical information

  • Date: 22nd March 18u30-22u00
  • Venue: Urban City – Ankerrui 9, 2000Antwerpen
  • Speakers:
    • Patrick Vanbrabandt – CEO Carya Group
    • Raf Van Den Plas – Manager  X-Plus Software
    • Prof. Jan De Visch
  • Registration: €50

My search for participation and a self-steering organizational structure

Today, prof. Jan De Visch has given me the opportunity to tell my own story. My 50 years of searching. Searching for the right company structure to make people love their work. It has not been an easy search. Today, it seems bon ton to dislike Taylor and classic company hierarchies, but that was not the case when I started my business experience.

Over the years, I have been working on many of the levels of maturity that are described by Frederic Laloux in his book “reinventing organizations”. Red — the maturity level of the medieval lord who is the dominant boss of a group of power seekers — is great when you need a high quality and a high control over a very small team. Great for fast start-up, yet weak for scaling-up. That’s when the “amber” level can be much more successful. In amber, everyone has a rank because he or she got to that rank. Great for creating large churches and armies, but not great for output-driven organizations. We tried some of that by allocating people to a rank, but soon we discovered there were more ranks than people. Orange works better for knowledge workers, since that level rewards people for their merits. This is thé level for Industry 3.0 companies in which bosses design the organization and have workers do the job that was designed for them. Not a great system for knowledge work, though. The boss cannot be everywhere controlling everyone’s work. We experimented with ‘green’, by introducing co-ownership and having people feel they own part of the business. That worked much better. We had our people take responsibilities over the client’s results and take team responsibilities over the long term. But, when times were bad or changes were needed, this level of maturity stalls the company. So, I almost went back to “red” out of frustration, until I read about the color “teal”. And that’s where I felt back on track. This is the organizational concept that we are now looking into. And that’s why the journey organized by the Argonauts is so important for us.

Self-steering looks promising, but we are not there yet. We have a lot to discover, learn, and try. But what I already learned, is that there is no text-book always-right model for company organization. I also discovered self-steering is more wrongly than rightly understood. Self-steering is about getting and taking responsibility. It has nothing to do with ‘go as you please’. Although there is no daily boss or chief in a self-steering organization, for everyone from cleaning lady to general manager, there are much more people to take into account and ask for their opinion than ever before.

Self-steering, teal, holocracy, fluid organization, … what model fits your organization best?

What model is the best fit with your (future) organization? We can’t tell. There is no one size fits all organizations solution. You have to discover your own model. The good news is, that you can get inspired by various existing models to design the self-steering approach that might be the best match with the DNA of your organization.

Getting a quick overview of the existing models and getting a much better understanding of their ins and outs, is why you would have to participate in the open session on self-steering on Thursday February 8, 2018. It’s an initiative of The Argonauts and Unizo, supported by Participium.

More info and registration

Program

  • Thursday February 8, 18.30h: welcome
  • Jan De Visch: introduction
  • Jan Lagast: my personal entrepreneurial adventure towards self-steering
  • Jan De Visch: existing models and their ins and outs

Data

  • Location: De Serre, Lange Gasthuisstraat 29-312000 Antwerp
  • Fee: €50 (VAT excl)
  • Dutch spoken
  • Limited to 60 participants

Speakers

Partners

  • The Argonauts
  • Unizo
  • Participium
  • Vivaldis Interim
  • Flanders Business School