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Check 25 - Companies - Systems Thinking

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Content provided by Ed Straw and Philip Tottenham, Ed Straw, and Philip Tottenham. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ed Straw and Philip Tottenham, Ed Straw, and Philip Tottenham or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

25. Systemic inquiry shall accompany investment commitments in the technosphere; thereafter, end-to-end producer responsibility applies.


Throughout Preflight Checklist, and our previous series Proof of Concept we have placed great hope on Systems Thinking. What is that, again? Yes, trying to see systems in their totality - but also: humility with regards to knowledge.


In this case, rather than assuming you know enough (Facebook: "move fast and break things") to chuck out products and see how they boom, bust or blow up; instead, armed with this humility, and with eyes and ears open to the variety of impacted perspectives, companies can move more deftly and discretely to create sustainable, durable designs.


Disruption, moving fast and breaking things, asking for forgiveness and not for permission, creating minimum viable products and trying them out on The Market - these things are fetishised in our intensely consumerist and wealth-focussed version of capitalism. And because importance is mainly attached to economies, economics and money, we are acculturated to the restrictive dimensions of this perspective. But such reductionism has landed us with outcomes we know well: the climate and biodiversity crisis, massive inequality, and more besides. It's not enough to wring our hands and look to the market in hope that an answer will appear - it hasn't so far.


So we're back to the rails - constitutional change - and with this principle, a principle both of humility and an approach to reality, we have an important pre-flight check, as it were, for any durable, sustainable, economic activity.


Talking Points:


Technosphere, Investment Commitments, Systems Thinking


Increased urbanisation as symbolic


The internet creates monopolies


Systems Thinking


Design Principles, Dieter Rams


Good intentions vs. Accountability


Uber and The London Assembly: City pushes Back


The casualisation of labour


Airbnb and communities


Links:


On the Technosphere, Jan Zalaceiwicz (Guardian, 2015) references Peter Haff, who coined the term for his 2013 paper - well worth a click, if only to read the abstract.


McKinsey on The Business Value of Design (2018)


Dieter Rams' - 10 Principles of Good Design (Wikipedia)


On the casualisation of labour - "I could have been a somebody... instead of a bum, which is what I am."

Marlon Brando On The Waterfront (1954 - IMDB trailer, 01:35):



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

46 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 305294489 series 2812514
Content provided by Ed Straw and Philip Tottenham, Ed Straw, and Philip Tottenham. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ed Straw and Philip Tottenham, Ed Straw, and Philip Tottenham or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

25. Systemic inquiry shall accompany investment commitments in the technosphere; thereafter, end-to-end producer responsibility applies.


Throughout Preflight Checklist, and our previous series Proof of Concept we have placed great hope on Systems Thinking. What is that, again? Yes, trying to see systems in their totality - but also: humility with regards to knowledge.


In this case, rather than assuming you know enough (Facebook: "move fast and break things") to chuck out products and see how they boom, bust or blow up; instead, armed with this humility, and with eyes and ears open to the variety of impacted perspectives, companies can move more deftly and discretely to create sustainable, durable designs.


Disruption, moving fast and breaking things, asking for forgiveness and not for permission, creating minimum viable products and trying them out on The Market - these things are fetishised in our intensely consumerist and wealth-focussed version of capitalism. And because importance is mainly attached to economies, economics and money, we are acculturated to the restrictive dimensions of this perspective. But such reductionism has landed us with outcomes we know well: the climate and biodiversity crisis, massive inequality, and more besides. It's not enough to wring our hands and look to the market in hope that an answer will appear - it hasn't so far.


So we're back to the rails - constitutional change - and with this principle, a principle both of humility and an approach to reality, we have an important pre-flight check, as it were, for any durable, sustainable, economic activity.


Talking Points:


Technosphere, Investment Commitments, Systems Thinking


Increased urbanisation as symbolic


The internet creates monopolies


Systems Thinking


Design Principles, Dieter Rams


Good intentions vs. Accountability


Uber and The London Assembly: City pushes Back


The casualisation of labour


Airbnb and communities


Links:


On the Technosphere, Jan Zalaceiwicz (Guardian, 2015) references Peter Haff, who coined the term for his 2013 paper - well worth a click, if only to read the abstract.


McKinsey on The Business Value of Design (2018)


Dieter Rams' - 10 Principles of Good Design (Wikipedia)


On the casualisation of labour - "I could have been a somebody... instead of a bum, which is what I am."

Marlon Brando On The Waterfront (1954 - IMDB trailer, 01:35):



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

46 episodes

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