4/ Normalcy collapse is like a big bubble collapsing into smaller ones, which then collapse further. All the way down until individual bubbles collapse. I wrote about normalcy fields inhttps://www.ribbonfarm.com/2012/05/09/welcome-to-the-future-nauseous/ …
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15/ This stack is what MBA programs teach, and what big companies model in their very bones. Whether you learn it in texts or through osmosis at your first job, it's a "way of doing business" that's a deep cultural skill/competence.
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16/ Just visit a developing world business environment if you aren't convinced this "business normalcy field" exists. The absence will be palpable. You may think of it as crappy developing country culture or corruption, or unprofessionalism, but it's a missing normalcy field.
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17/ This business-normalcy-field is in fact the greatest economic asset that separates developed and developing/third-world economies. It's an operating system that carries 80% of the intelligence of running a thriving, wealthy economy.
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18/ When this field is absent because it never emerged, or once existed but has collapsed, business feels like a bunch of random, anarchic, inefficient, messy hack activity that is low-yield and produces little wealth, and very inefficiently.
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19/ My point is this: as and when this field finally starts to collapse, the business world will be at a fork in the road: collapse into developing country state, or reinvent management knowledge on a new assumptions stack.
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20/ This has been, uhh, an extended informercial for the thinking/writing I'm doing now: figuring out the new assumptions stack we should be using :D
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Oh man. This, right here.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Hello please find the unroll here: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/981602626176339968.html … Talk to you soon.
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