Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Carman Pirie blogs how an memo from Verizon marked “Proprietary & Confidential. For Internal Use Only.” inevitably got published. The memo’s about how to counter the iPhone. As Carman says, why couldn’t Verizon just write something for public consumption and be done with it.

I’m fond of showing a picture of InternalMemos.com during presentations, and asking the rhetorical question: can we meaningfully talk about an “Internal Memo” any more?

It seems to me that the old hard lines between organisations and the rest of us are getting more and more porous. The people I meet these days at big organisations are typically dressed more casually, on Facebook, don’t really love music companies, and don’t pretend ritualistic loyalty to the organisation. That doesn’t mean they aren’t loyal or responsible, just that what keeps them there is not hypnotism. They’re not deserters, they’re volunteers, and who wants an army of conscripts these days?

And sure, there are those who don’t feel so good about all this. I don’t want to spend too much time trying to push or persuade them that they’re wrong. I’m much happier working with the volunteers, there seem to be enough of them.

Share Post

More Posts

Bunny Bunny

A funny game illustrates what we may be missing in many of our meetings

Leading from the clown

I shot this in a single eight-minute take, which is in the spirit of an experience of Ralf Wetzel’s workshop, Leading from the Clown. Clown training is probably the deepest and most challenging work I’ve done. Enjoy.

Noticing

The power of small gestures and noticing

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

The experience of dialogue

Good post by Chris Corrigan: Our experience of dialogue. This clip is interesting: interviews with screenwriters who point out the function of dialogue in a television show. One of the

Johnnie Moore

The perils of the complicated

Chris Corrigan has a good post on how complicated models masked the complexity of the financial system – and made the perpetrators very rich at everyone’s else’s expense. In these

Johnnie Moore

Neurononsense

I don’t think I’ve ever linked to the Weekly Standard before but this debunking of the overplaying of neuroscience is a good read. (I’m overlooking the anti-liberal dig at the

Johnnie Moore

Stuck on transmit

John Porcaro comments on the deadening effect of overpreparation. An otherwise engaging offsite goes off the boil: One of the folks on our team came completely prepared with a three