Linked inTwitter

A Mundane Comedy is Dominic Kelleher's new book, which will be published in mid 2024. The introduction is available here and further extracts will appear on this site and on social media in the coming months.

The 52:52:52 project, launching on this site and on social media in mid 2024, will help you address 52 issues with 52 responses over 52 weeks.

This site addresses what's changing, at the personal, organisational and societal levels. You'll learn about key changes across more than 150 elements of life, from ageing and time, through nature and animals, to kindness and love...and much more besides, which will help you better prepare for related change in your own life.

What's Changing? - Change

blog image

 

Please see below selected recent change-related content about change itself.

 

See also: 

 

February 2024

  • ‘Motivational interviewing’ (MI) is a counselling approach developed by the clinical psychologists William R Miller and Stephen Rollnick. It’s all about emphasising change from within the client. MI practitioners use their counselling skills, such as open-ended questions and ways to reflect, to evoke what’s called change talk – a conversation about what clients are unhappy about and how they’d like to change. 

 

March 2023

 

June 2022

 

June 2021

 

May 2021

 

September 2020

  • The rapid activation of global responses to the COVID-19 public health crisis has been compared to the lack of progress being made by a range of activists on various political, social, and environmental issues in recent years. A recurring sentiment was, “If the world can respond so quickly to COVID-19, what is stopping progress on other issues?” A 2017 article in the Stanford Social Innovation Review provided a framework for thinking about how people lead and succeed in social change efforts. After extensive research studying hundreds of social change initiatives over multiple years and interviewing social entrepreneurs, civil society leaders, and public officials around the world, Battilana identified three distinct roles, each with essential parts to play in establishing a pathway to change:
    • An agitator creates awareness of the grievances of specific individuals or groups
    • An innovator creates an actionable solution to address the problem
    • An orchestrator coordinates action across groups, organizations, and sectors to scale the proposed solution.

 

July 2020

  • From the Peasants Revolt in 1381, to the French Revolution in the late 1700s, and recent protests in - among many places - Chile, Lebanon, Hong Kong and the US, the disruption of society to demand change has a long and powerful history. Protests have historically come in waves with momentum being carried across borders and transcending communities but, while the right to protest peacefully is protected, the consequences do not always reflect this. When civil rights, equality and democratic accountability are at stake, are protests guaranteed facilitators of change, asked Chatham House. Drawing on contemporary and historical examples from across the globe, it considered the tradition of protests and assessed how people move beyond protest to enact meaningful change

 

May 2020

  • Big Think noted that we have a cognitive bias that tends to make us prefer the status quo, and focus more on the potential losses involved with change rather than the potential benefits. But here's a simpler strategy: When you're indecisive about a big life decision, choose the path of change.  That's the takeaway of research recently published in the Review of Economics Studies by Steven Levitt, an economist at the University of Chicago and host of the "Freakonomics" podcast.

 

April 2020

 

March 2020

  • We tend to under-predict or over-predict change. The reason: imagining plausible outcomes forces us to confront our expectations and cherished beliefs. If we were to jot down descriptions of the future, we'd quickly find that they mirrored our own cognitive biases. We'd focus mainly on the subjects we already know well - like our work, company or industry - so we'd miss all of the related risk and opportunity ahead, argues the Future Today Institute.
  • Learning to embrace change involves focusing on and making the most of the positives it creates. The School of Life advocates a practice called active adaptation, which involves not only reconciling ourselves to change but finding ways to make these changes function better. The practice borrows from a technique pioneered in improvisational comedy known as “Yes, and…” During scenes, when a performer makes a suggestion, their partner is not permitted to question or reject it; instead, they must accept and build on it by saying “Yes, and…” to whatever has been proposed. Active adaptation at work involves a similar process. Rather than complain about or attempt to resist changes, it involves instead channelling our talents and efforts into helping them work better.  

 

September 2019

 

June 2019

  • BCG believes there is a gap between where most organisations are today and where they will need to be to succeed in the coming decades. The companies that win in the 2020s will be designed to constantly learn and adapt to changing realities, combine artificial and human intelligence in new ways, and harness the benefits of broader business ecosystems. Reaching this necessary future state will require a fundamental transformation. This change effort will be challenging. Many businesses have deeply entrenched operating systems that are predicated on hierarchy and human decision making. They will need to redesign their internal processes and build new capabilities and business models. Furthermore, this will not be a one-time change effort: the dynamic nature of business will require organisations to build capabilities for ongoing large-scale change to keep up with evolving technology and competition.

 

April 2019

 

March 2019

December 2018

 

November 2018

 

October 2018

 

September 2018

 

August 2018

 

June-July 2018

  • In Mind Set!, futurist John Naisbitt (author of Megatrends), advocates 11 mindsets, the first of which seems to give the lie to the hoary, ancient aphorism (pace Heraclitus), trotted out by the unthinking on a regular basis, that "change is the only constant".
  • For example, mindset 1 is, while many things remain change, most things remain constant. Key ideas:
    • The seasons still -for many, though obviously for many fewer than before - determine the rhythm of life.
    • More things are like men's fashions than women's fashions - i.e. relatively unchanging.
    • More than 90% of new product launches are unsuccessful, suggesting that most consumers feel that they are doing just fine with what they have.
    • Home, family and work are - for many - great constants.
  • Naisbitt concludes, perhaps convincingly, that "most of us are not hunting for news and change, but for orientation into the future, for clarity in a confusing world".

Timelines
Spaces
Signifiers