Organizational Structure Quotes

Quotes tagged as "organizational-structure" Showing 1-7 of 7
“As you try to balance between the socialist and capitalist systems in the world, you will come up against the biggest problem facing humanity today. Jung wrote in 1938 "Any large company composed of wholly admirable persons has the morality and intelligence of an unwieldy, stupid, and violent animal. The bigger the organization, the more unavoidable is its immorality and blind stupidity." Each of these systems promotes itself by pointing out the moral failings of the other, but these moral failings are actually failings brought about by people acting within the context of large organizations. What is truly needed is to learn a structure of organization of human beings that provides for the organized group the same capacity and propensity for moral behavior that is possessed by individuals.”
Anonymous

“Growth responds to Structure whether organizational or personal. Build a structure for your life if you must grow”
Awolumate Samuel

Kelli Russell Agodon
“maybe life is a cobweb,
not an organizational chart.”
Kelli Russell Agodon, Dialogues with Rising Tides

Pearl Zhu
“Organizational development is part of the digital strategy, and digital strategy equals to business strategy with digital new normal.”
Pearl Zhu, Digital Fit: Manifest Future of Business with Multidimensional Fit

Pearl Zhu
“The digital dimension of organizational structure is enjoying powerful tailwind.”
Pearl Zhu, 100 Digital Rules

Pearl Zhu
“The digital transformation won’t happen overnight, the organizational structure optimization takes planning, experimenting, and scaling up.”
Pearl Zhu, Digital Maturity: Take a Journey of a Thousand Miles from Functioning to Delight

Linda Nagata
“Something drew her attention. Her eyes narrowed as if to bring a distant object into focus. "I have a new sense,” she realized. “I feel myself standing on the surface of a vast library.” She turned in a circle, scanning the featureless blue plain. “I feel the presence of well-ordered data.”

She reached out, and to Kona’s surprise, a curving side path appeared in response to her beckoning gesture. Files sprang up on the path, each one a thin, vertical pane large enough to step into. The first file in the stack showed a branching map of the library with all its major sections neatly labeled.”
Linda Nagata, Edges