Make a badass out of yourself and those around you, going further and faster than you thought possible.
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Being deliberately developmental means weaving personal growth into you daily work and life.
By being a deliberately developmental individual you:
By being a deliberately developmental leader you make your leadership more productive, more fulfilling and incredibly rewarding as you see the people around you flourish.
By building a deliberatey developmental organization:
In a deliberately developmental culture
The beliefs that underpin a deliberately developmental culture are:
In a deliberately developmental culture
A deliberately developmental culture fosters:
Deliberately Developmental Organizations (DDO) are organizations that are committed to developing every one of their people by weaving personal growth into daily work.
Think of a DDO as an incubator for people’s development.
In a DDO, the whole organization is engaged in practices designed to foster personal growth alongside the pursuit of the business’s priorities and tasks.
From My experience with a Deliberately Developmental Organization:
DDOs share some traits with the Management 3.0 approach, such as an emphasis on company culture, personal growth, self-organization and transparency. But the resemblance stops there. Management 3.0 aims to create happiness and self-realization in the workplace. DDOs aim to make a badass out of you, going further and faster than you thought possible.
Read more about companies who have adopted a DDO mindset in the Harvard Business Review article Making Business Personal.
The Inner Development Goals (IDG) introduction video makes reference to a deliberately developmental society.
If you are a leader who wants to build a DDO, you should understand that you can’t want it just for the company. You must want it for yourself.
You must be prepared to participate fully and even to “go first” in making your own limitations public. You must also not want it just to generate extraordinary business results—you must put equal value on leading a company that contributes to the flourishing of its people as an end in itself.
You will need patience: It takes time to develop an environment in which people feel safe doing the personal work they’ll be asked to do on a regular basis. And you must continually support, defend, and champion this new form of community.
Deliberately developmental leaders
Being deliberately developmental (DD) isn’t easy or comfortable. So for individuals, groups and cultures optimizing for comfort and quick fixes, deliberate developing is a poor fit.
If the culture, on the other hand, is ambitious on the behalf of individual well-functioning (and willing to put its effort where its mouth is), then DD just might be the mindset to unleash the full potential of each individual and the group as a whole.
Transcending your limits involves overcoming the fight-or-flight response occasioned by confronting what you are working on about yourself.
Early on, nearly everyone finds the level of vulnerability that DD brings disorienting.
When a group of students after a presentation were asked “So how many of you would like to work at [this DDO] ?” Just three or four hands went up in a class of 80. “Why not?” the presenter asked. One young woman who’d been an active and impressive contributor to the case conversation replied, “I want people at work to think I’m better than I am; I don’t want them to see how I really am!”
Clearly, people who consider joining a DDO must be willing to show themselves at their worst. And those who join with a distinguished record must be willing to consider big changes in the way they operate. Senior hires at both Decurion and Bridgewater told us: “I heard the words about how it was going to be different, but I didn’t understand what that would mean for me.”
A DDO makes work deeply engaging; it becomes a way of life. If you want to be able to go home and leave work completely behind, this may not be the right place for you.
The brand of happiness a DDO offers—which arises from becoming a better version of yourself—involves labor pains. Some people might think they would appreciate that but really would not. Others simply cannot imagine that pain at work could lead to something expansive and life changing.
Finally, a DDO is continually evolving. If you expect a workplace to never fall short of its most inspiring principles and guiding ideas, you will quickly be disappointed. A DDO makes space for its people to grow; they must make space for it to develop in return.
A sustainable DDO culture depends on a critical mass of people who are together long enough to build strong relationships and gain experience with the practices that facilitate development over time. Thus we question the value of this approach for companies that work on a contractor model and maintain flexibility by depending heavily on free agents, because turnover for them might be too high, and commitment to the organization too low.
Building an effective deliberately developmental organization requires that new people be chosen very carefully, with an eye to their appetite for personal reflection and their comfort with examining their own limitations.
Even so, it may take 12 to 18 months to be sure that a new hire will do well in this culture, so you should be prepared for a higher rate of turnover than you might otherwise expect. But the people who make it through this induction will most likely display dramatic levels of commitment and engagement.
The book Everyone Culture: Becoming a Deliberately Developmental Organization goes into detail on the concept of deliberately developmental organizations.