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Resources
  • The Craftsman
    The Craftsman
    by Richard Sennett
  • Juggle! Rethink Work, Reclaim your Life
    Juggle! Rethink Work, Reclaim your Life
    by Ian Sanders
  • Animal Logic
    Animal Logic
    by Richard Barnes
  • About Looking
    About Looking
    by John Berger
  • Dialogue and the Art of Thinking Together: A Pioneering Approach to Communicating in Business and in Life
    Dialogue and the Art of Thinking Together: A Pioneering Approach to Communicating in Business and in Life
    by William Isaacs
  • Changing Conversations in Organizations: A Complexity Approach to Change (Complexity & Emergence in Organizations)
    Changing Conversations in Organizations: A Complexity Approach to Change (Complexity & Emergence in Organizations)
    by Dr Patricia Shaw
  • On Photography
    On Photography
    by Susan Sontag
  • Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World
    Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World
    by Margaret J. Wheatley
  • The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures
    The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures
    by Dan Roam
  • Photography and Science (Exposures)
    Photography and Science (Exposures)
    by Kelley Wilder
  • Manufactured Landscapes [2006]
    Manufactured Landscapes [2006]
    starring Edward Burtynsky
  • Images of Organization
    Images of Organization
    by Gareth Morgan
« The 'real' thing | Main | An image of leadership? »
Tuesday
Jan132009

Crafting Experience

A tough day at the office today, though the luxury of my coaching work is that I at least see other people’s offices. Looking further into ‘The Craftsman,’ I’m beginning to realise that Sennett articulates many of the ideas that have lurked for some time beneath the surface of my practice.

Sennett proposes that ‘the craft of making physical things provides insight into the techniques of experience that can shape our dealings with others.’ In thinking of the coaching conversations I try to pursue, the three basic crafting abilities of localizing (specifying where something important, good or bad, is happening), questioning (or holding a sense of curiosity about the nature of success or failure) and being open to doing things differently and questioning habitual patterns, sits well with many of the interventions I attempt to construct.

Sennett claims that making time to ‘dwell’ in these areas is critical and that the pace of business often precludes this. But perhaps this is a pointer towards the economies that we may choose to fashion in the future. According to Sennett:

“Doing one thing well, understanding it in depth, may be a recipe for a worker or company to be left behind [...]. Tests that measure a person’s capacity to management of many problems at the expense of depth suit an economic regime that prizes quick study, superficial knowledge, all too often embodied by consultants who dart in and out of organizations. The craftsman’s abilities to dig deep stands at the pole opposite from potential ability deployed in this fashion.” (Sennett, p.284).

Ouch.

 

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