The Tyranny of Excellence

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

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

I liked Tim Kastelle’s recent post of the value of gumption in innovation. It’s a rich topic but I’d summarise my sense of gumption as the capacity to keep going in the face of adversity imperfection and setbacks. It’s about accepting, and perhaps transcending, failure but it’s not a denial of it.

Another way to think of this is to separate failure from floundering. We flounder when we over-react or repress failure.

So organisations flounder if they set up procedures and practices that appear to be about excellence but are more about being in denial of our variability and complexity as human beings. Efforts to make meetings a guaranteed success quite often just lead to the repression of doubt or criticism.

As you probably know, I’m as massive fan of improvisation theatre and its exercises. They provide a constant practice in noticing things aren’t working but carrying on. We can learn from the friction but we don’t delude ourselves it won’t be there.

The risk is that we set impossible standards for ourselves and then get demoralised by not reaching them. The demand for perfection makes us hypercriticial and we fail to appreciate what we are actually achieving. When we lose that sense of reality, ironically, we’re more likely to fail or perhaps to give up altogether.

This is what Viv and I call the Tyranny of Excellence, illustrated above.

And Viv explores it more here.

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

Small p presence

Getting away from grandiosity or solemnity. small p presence is about being open to the life around us

Small i improv

Facilitation is often about small, subtle acts of noticing and experimenting

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

links for 2010-03-27

Presentation Zen: The secret to great work is great play Nice recap well illustrated (tags: creativity play) Principle Healthcare and Layscience.net « Don't Get Fooled Again "A company doesn’t have

Johnnie Moore

Stumbling on happiness

I’ve just finished Dan Gilbert’s Stumbling on Happiness. It’s chockful of psychological experiments wittily narrated with a general message that things are not quite what they seem. When we remember

Johnnie Moore

Reboot: Tagging

I’m back home for the excellent Reboot7 conference in Copenhagen. I’ll probably dump down some of my responses over a few posts here. First after great talks by Lee Bryant