Global Trends - Series #1
by Utah Lt. Governor Greg Bell
08/02/2012 | 1116 views | 1 1 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Utah Lt. Governor Greg Bell
Utah Lt. Governor Greg Bell
slideshow
Weather, war, disease. Radio, telephone, television. Cars and airplanes. These are some of the great forces which have shaped history. John Naisbitt calls them Megatrends. My blogs for the next few weeks will concentrate on some important trends I've observed.

I've been intrigued to watch the emergence of companies and groups which are much more "horizontal" than traditional vertically-designed organizations. They are also much more organic: groups are created by their members, often somewhat spontaneously, around shared interests. They often function without formal rules. The connection between members can be based on nothing more than mutual cooperation, some of it only tacit. The internet is a great example. It grew out of something else, almost of itself. No one owns it, and remarkably, it is open to everyone without cost. Al Qaeda is an “organization” but has little hierarchy, is based on relationships, and has no legal standing. It's as much a personal affiliation as a philosophical one.

Contrast this horizontal form against the traditional model for business, government, military, etc. where the leadership structure is in pyramid form with the president at the top, managers in the middle and the workers at the bottom. The world was built by these vertical organizations, and for the most part they have served us well. But things are changing.

Some new businesses, especially in the tech world, are more horizontal. While they typically have a board of directors and a CEO, etc. the actual lines of power may be significantly different. Actual power is likely to be shared with or even dominated by the creative and technical teams. These people have been able to move freely to other jobs and to demand high salaries and unique working conditions because they develop the firm's profitable products. Middle management hardly exists in such firms, except for administrative functions.

Collaboration

Apple has grown its iPad and iPhone businesses by making its codes available to app developers. Consequently, the utility of the iPad and iPhone has multiplied geometrically. Wikipedia's encyclopedia entries are written and edited by the world. Moreover, Apple's, HP's and other companies' customer service is mainly handled by wikigroups. Can you imagine a company thirty years ago off-loading its customer service and product refinement to unpaid people not under their control, but who will address their customers' needs? Wiki members collaborate without knowing each other. Linux is one of the most powerful and popular computer codes. It is completely open source. I can't think of an analog to that in the 1950s or 60s.

Collaboration as a formalized method of doing business and of engaging others is becoming the norm. The younger generation seems to gravitate to collaboration rather than an authority-based, chain of command structure. Cities, towns and other entities are using public involvement projects with bottom-up citizen involvement models. For example, Envision Utah has no governmental power, yet has aided numerous cities, counties, and regions in developing far-reaching plans for transportation, air quality, land use and zoning--all done by creating an honest, open, and highly-inclusive collaborative process.

We need to take a new look at the structure of our institutions to see if we can improve them by making them more horizontal, more open, more flexible and organic for consumers and workers. In the same way, established institutions need to create much more collaborative processes, for both external and internal relations. Successful organizations will involve their clients in these non-traditional ways.
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August 05, 2012
Greg Bell is on the bleeding edge of future macro trends that will affect us all as we head into the 4th quarter of 1992.

today's headlines
Local Headlines
May 17, 2013 | 31964 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Salt Lake Tribune

Op-ed: Swallow and the Legislature

Editorial: The right decision: Herbert should stick to his guns

Suit: Make EPA force Utah to cut winter pollution

Hatch wants IRS probe to expand, include Freedom Path

Green activists, neighbors blast new West Davis freeway plan

Hatch calls for investigation of Obamacare funding

Thousands of Utahns face Defense Department furloughs

Utah charter schools under new performance scrutiny

Midvale's streetlight project stalls over flawed bid process

Deseret News

Matthew Sanders: Imploding trust in America's institutions

Editorial: Habits die hard

Utah lawmakers look to regulate child access to e-cigarettes

Oil, gas wells to move closer to Duchesne County homes

Health care reform about to 'get real' for Utahns

New poll shows GOP caucus attendees support changes to nomination system

2 county attorneys investigating Swallow, Utah Attorney General's office

West Davis Corridor project unveiled amid criticism

Elder Oaks promotes strengthening the free exercise of religion

Other

Heidi Toth: Squandering the public trust (Daily Herald)

RedBlue: Can Barack Obama survive scandals? (Daily Herald)

Op-ed: The gigabit community (Standard-Examiner)

Editorial: Don't make AG an appointment (Standard-Examiner)

UDOT releases DEIS, recommendation for Legacy extension (Standard-Examiner)

Ogden School Board faces anger over cutbacks (Standard-Examiner)

Will Swallow make appearance at the state GOP convention? (Standard-Examiner)

Hatch pushes for expanded probe into IRS actions (Standard-Examiner)

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