flat organizations based on freedom, teamwork, and fluid job definitions (Teams of 6)

A researcher named Homer Hibarger had been testing theories about the effect of workplace illumination on worker productivity. His work, not surprisingly, had been sponsored by a maker of electric lightbulbs. While a group of female workers assembled telephone relays and receiver coils, Homer turned the lights up. Productivity went up. Then he turned the lights down. Productivity still went up! Puzzled, Homer tried a new series of interventions. First, he told the “girls” that they would be entitled to two five-minute breaks every day. Productivity went up. Next it was six breaks a day. Productivity went up again. Then he let them leave an hour early every day. Up again. Free lunches and refreshments. Up! Then Homer cut the breaks, reinstated the old workday, and scrapped the free food. But productivity barely dipped at all.

Mayo, who was brought in to make sense of this, was exultant. His theory: the various interventions in workplace routine were as nothing compared with the new interpersonal dynamics generated by the experimental situation itself. “What actually happened was that six individuals became a team and the team gave itself wholeheartedly and spontaneously to cooperation … They felt themselves to be participating, freely and without afterthought, and were happy in the knowledge that they were working without coercion.” The lessons Mayo drew from the experiment are in fact indistinguishable from those championed by the gurus of the nineties: vertical hierarchies based on concepts of rationality and control are bad; flat organizations based on freedom, teamwork, and fluid job definitions are good.


Professor Elton Mayo of the Harvard Business School in the 1920s.


#geometria / florlis

Social media - woot W00t!

social media fills a gap and satisfies a need that no other tool can. vs. TV, Newspaper, Phone Call, Email

It brings down boundaries between people that society automatically puts up.

On Twitter, for example, there is no stopping you from contacting your favorite actor or athlete.

You can pretty much count on the fact that they see your message.  (its called egoism ... we all look at the @)

Yes, it is true that they will generally not reply, but that is simply because it would generate tons of busy work and other potential problems.


Athletes and actors are nice, but who really cares?

The Real Power really lies with the "social" part or the media,

... the ability to find like minded friends regardless of your unique individual personality ... you can find 100s of friends just like-mind as you.


From there its about share discovery of Self-Discovery.

More :: http://technmarketing.com/web/7-valuable-lessons-twitter-has-taught-me-about-life/

Recording Industry Association of America - partying like it is still 1999

13 million songs for sale online (2008)
10 million never got a single buyer

80 percent of all revenue came from just 52,000 "pay per download" songs. (out of 13 million songs)
Less than one percent of the songs are money makers

- PRS for Music, a nonprofit royalty collection agency

Since music sales peaked in 1999, and have declined since
- data from the Recording Industry Association of America

VS...
Youtubers
Podcasters
whom have gained popularity (sales) by broadcasting their 'samples'
*1 Trillion vids downloaded/month on Youtube

Swan Songs?

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/01/opinion/01blow.html
Media_httpgraphics8nytimescomimages20090801opinionmusicforweb2gif_vsldxujbfgfhalw