Generate Organization-wide Understanding with Cross Discipline Causal Loop Diagramming - Chris Lucian

Generate Organization-wide Understanding with Cross Discipline Causal Loop Diagramming - Chris Lucian

Generate Organization-wide Understanding with Cross Discipline Causal Loop Diagramming - Chris Lucian
224 people attending

Do you find your organization misses opportunities because of cross functional misunderstandings?

This workshop addresses the growing reliance on specialists and knowledge silos in organizations, which often leads to communication breakdowns and can be detrimental to successful strategies. By utilizing insights from the book "5th Discipline" and the technique of Causal Loop Diagramming, the workshop aims to preemptively solve these issues. Participants will engage in drawing and comparing causal loop diagrams at their tables, fostering new insights and receiving feedback. This workshop is particularly beneficial for cross-functional colleagues, but individual participants will also find it valuable. It offers a deep dive into understanding complex adaptive systems within organizations, highlighting cause and effect patterns that improve the performance of typically separately managed systems. By identifying and addressing second order effects, the workshop aims to alleviate the pain and confusion arising from these interactions.

This is for any experience level. This can be helpful as a retro or a organizational strategy tool.

Come alone or with your colleagues! This workshop can be done as a single individual or as a group if you attend with coworkers.

So who is Chris Lucian?

I'm Chris Lucian, the director of software development at Hunter Industries, a founder of mob programming, co-host of the Mob Mentality show and international keynote speaker. I am passionate about the advancement of software craftsmanship and machine learning. I seek the continuous improvement of myself, my family, my company, and my community. I believe that we can explore the unexplored potential in all things when looking at our processes with automation and creativity in mind. Growing up I learned a lot about both the important of Psychological Safety and what it can look like when it does not exist. I was fortunate enough to go to a project based middle school where I learned the importance of public speaking, research, technology and delivering my work quickly and frequently. I worked full time when going to university for both my masters and bachelors and in doing so I learned the importance of time management and deliberate deep work. In my career I have found that all of these skills are important to be effective. When I'm have a moment of free time, I spend it gaming or reading sci-fi and fantasy.