Commander's Intent: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Category=Guiding philosophies}}
The term '''Commander's Intent''' is taken from the book ''Made to Stick'' by the brothers Heath, p.26.
The term '''Commander's Intent''' is taken from the book ''Made to Stick'' by the brothers Heath, p.26.


It refers to the fact that no amount of planning will survive the encounter with reality. One can plan only to be ready for contingencies. Unexpected events, conditions, and contingencies abound in most real situations. Therefore, the actor can only adapt. ''You can lose the ability to execute the original plan, but you never lose the responsibility of executing the intent.'' Carrying out the original intent requires adaptability and creativity.
It refers to the fact that no amount of planning will survive the encounter with reality. One can plan only to be ready for contingencies. Unexpected events, conditions, and contingencies abound in most real situations. Therefore, the actor can only adapt. ''You can lose the ability to execute the original plan, but you never lose the responsibility of executing the intent.'' Carrying out the original intent requires adaptability and creativity.
[[Category:Planning]][[Category:Recruiting]]

Latest revision as of 16:26, 15 February 2011

Main > OSE > Guiding philosophies


The term Commander's Intent is taken from the book Made to Stick by the brothers Heath, p.26.

It refers to the fact that no amount of planning will survive the encounter with reality. One can plan only to be ready for contingencies. Unexpected events, conditions, and contingencies abound in most real situations. Therefore, the actor can only adapt. You can lose the ability to execute the original plan, but you never lose the responsibility of executing the intent. Carrying out the original intent requires adaptability and creativity.