All About Power

All About Power

One of the central features of the?Social Age?is a rebalancing of power, held into a shift towards more multi dimensional landscapes of power. In general, we see that the individual, with?Social Authority, held within community, can find a voice as powerful as that of the structural and formal broadcast.

No alt text provided for this image

Formal leaders are ‘given’ power, but Social ones earn it, and the two collide at the intersections of systems (which is to say, these days, everywhere…)

We see that technology fractures the relationships between?space and power?(although the metaverse may reimpose that power dynamic upon us), and that socially moderated power is more fluid and contextual than formal.

Indeed, i would normally go so far as to say that is you want to understand just about anything – from ‘people’, to ‘systems’, from ‘learning’ to ‘change’, then a good place to start is with power. Who has it. Who wants it. What flavour do you carry, and how does it interact with others.

Understanding how?power?‘works’ is important in many everyday contexts: how voices are silenced, how ‘sense making’ occurs, how learning is transferred, how innovation is silenced, how change is initiated – or confounded – and how stories fly, or die, to name but a few.

Typically i would say that the Social Age is delivered to us through technology, but it is not ‘about’ technology. Clearly the rise of socially collaborative technologies, to the point where they are utterly pervasive and democratised, impacts upon power. People today are no longer simply connected through formal (and observable) systems: rather they are connected in many different ways in many different spaces.

In research in the National Health Service i saw a group of practitioners identity seventeen different technologies that they used to collaborate on a weekly basis. Of course they did not all use all of them, but that is the point: they curated their personal diverse ecosystems, and then inhabited them. A self selection of space, bordered by formally defined spaces. A mixed landscape. And a self selection of the systems of power that they operate within.

When you ask people about how trust works, they often describe aspects of control that relate to power: so they want to know who ‘owns’ a conversation, or where their words will be carried to. They want to know how?conversations?are moderated: through formal mechanisms or intervention, or social convention. They want to know how clear the landscape is, and they state that they ‘trust’ formal technologies (controlled by formal power) about 30% less than social ones.

Which is not to say that social ones are uncontrolled: whilst they may give that appearance, they are simply governed more by self limitation or social contention than expressly articulated rules. But they are still governed.

Sometimes we conflate ‘what we like’ with ‘good’, but good may be something we don’t like – at least from someone else’s perspective. ‘Good’ is not a universal construct, not an absolute one, and hence what it often comes down to is power.

Broadly i would consider that the?Socially Dynamic Organisation?still operates within a formally defined structure of power (a hierarchy) which carries both clarity and consequence within it, but it is more nuanced in it’s relationship with multiple social structures too.

That’s why i say that this type of Organisation, a Socially Dynamic one, is a negotiated construct more so than a formally engineered one.

Systems of power partly underlie the contemporary debate, wrangling, and frequent breakdowns, of the ‘hybrid’ or ‘back to work’ conversations: the move to remote not only moved the location of work, but also the power structures behind it, and then consolidated this through time. Hence any ‘return’ to a physical space is also a re-imposition of legacy power, and hence loss of individual agency. Again: the future will best be negotiated, and that negotiation may involve and active recognition of the new parallel systems and structures of power.

No alt text provided for this image

If you are interested in Power: ‘Power and Potential’ is an enquiry framework (my first published one in fact) that explores the shape and reach of your power through 16 questions.

In ‘The Social Leadership Handbook’ there is a chapter on Social Authority, which considers social power and leadership at the intersection of systems.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Julian Stodd的更多文章

  • #WorkingOutLoud on the Planetary Philosophy

    #WorkingOutLoud on the Planetary Philosophy

    I’ve been immersed in this work today, and will be till the end of the week. Sae has carved out some time, and has…

  • Strategic AI: Domains of Disruption

    Strategic AI: Domains of Disruption

    I’m building out the materials for my new ‘Strategic AI’ workshop, based on the book ‘Engines of Engagement: a curious…

    1 条评论
  • Spaces of Safety

    Spaces of Safety

    Our Organisations must hold a somewhat unusual space, when stacked up against what we see in our broader society. As…

    3 条评论
  • Social Leadership Fragments: Permeability

    Social Leadership Fragments: Permeability

    The impact of social and collaborative technologies has been to make many boundariesmore permeable, with a range of…

  • Social Leadership: Organisation as Ecosystem

    Social Leadership: Organisation as Ecosystem

    Today I’ve been working on the new Social Leadership material, and specifically the notion of the ‘Organisation as…

    2 条评论
  • Fragments: Metacognition, Transdisciplinarity, Sense Making

    Fragments: Metacognition, Transdisciplinarity, Sense Making

    Some of the most exciting areas of learning research are considering features such as the ‘expert generalist’, aspects…

    1 条评论
  • #WorkingOutLoud on the Socially Dynamic Organisation: Disaggregation

    #WorkingOutLoud on the Socially Dynamic Organisation: Disaggregation

    The shift from the Domain based Organisation, through to the Socially Dynamic one, is essentially a disaggregation of…

    2 条评论
  • Writing

    Writing

    I spent last week completely focussed on a longer piece of writing and today am simply sharing some fragments of…

  • London Dereliction Walk: the Edge of Practice

    London Dereliction Walk: the Edge of Practice

    This is the third time I’ve guided the experimental London Dereliction Walk, which is a day of exploration and small…

    5 条评论
  • The Social Context of Generative AI

    The Social Context of Generative AI

    ‘Engines of Engagement: a curious book about Generative AI’ was published a year ago, and my thinking has continued to…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了