Requisite Inefficiency

35

description

Driven by market forces, organisations struggle to produce more or better with less. In times of crisis that seems to grow into a condition for survival. And yet, clearing all inefficiencies or not the right ones, could have just the opposite effect. (Through the lenses of Ashby's law: Both organisms and the social systems they create need some excess of variety in any given moment to have requisite variety for their viability in the long run.) Some inefficiency is not just good to have, it is needed for survival.

Transcript of Requisite Inefficiency

Page 1: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 2: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 3: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 4: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 5: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 6: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 7: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 8: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 9: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 10: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 11: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 12: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 13: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 14: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 15: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 16: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 17: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 18: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 19: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 20: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 21: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 22: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 23: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 24: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 25: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 26: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 27: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 28: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 29: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 30: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 31: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 32: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 33: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 34: Requisite Inefficiency
Page 35: Requisite Inefficiency