Great people, a great idea, and funding aren’t enough.
As Michael Dell once put it, great ideas are a commodity, but the execution of them is not.
But this is where so many organizations fall short — confusing presence with productivity, and motion with progress, content to spend all day responding to emails, and logging in to Zoom calls at the expense of getting any real work done.
Cue leadership development webinars aimed at fixing this problem.
Problem is, all of the leadership development webinars in the world amount to nothing if the systems and cultures people find themselves in when they return to their desks don’t support what they've learned.
But what if we could simply put into code better ways of work?
Well, there’s a new type of organization brewing that empowers leaders and teams to do exactly that — the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO).
A DAO is a blockchain-based organization represented by rules encoded in a smart contract, that are transparent about decisions and money-flows, and are controlled by the organization’s members (typically anybody who holds the DAO’s crypto token — something that can be purchased or earned).
A DAO empowers its members to securely pool funds, govern decisions, allocate capital to value creation opportunities, and transparently distribute funds to contributors and suppliers.
Some popular DAOs include the social community Friends With Benefits, the metaverse Decentraland, and the crypto-media site Global Coin Research.
In a world where most organizations are still pegged to archaic, costly, and bureaucratic ways of doing things, encoding smart, better, faster ways of work into an organization can offer it a huge competitive advantage, especially over the long term.
For example, below I have highlighted a series of cultural and systemic behaviors at organizations, with aspirational behaviors on the left.
The advent of the decentralized autonomous organization provides organizations with a unique and novel opportunity to put into code some of what management thinkers as well as organizational psychologists and business leaders more broadly, preach.
The WorkFlow podcast is hosted by Steve Glaveski with a mission to help you unlock your potential to do more great work in far less time, whether you're working as part of a team or flying solo, and to set you up for a richer life.
To help you avoid stepping into these all too common pitfalls, we’ve reflected on our five years as an organization working on corporate innovation programs across the globe, and have prepared 100 DOs and DON’Ts.