登陆注册
55949000000002

第2章

PREFACE

NAIVE BEGINNINGS

I don't know where to begin. I never do. My friend and teacher Dani Weinberg told me that the best defense against others' discovering something upsetting about me is to simply feature it, so I'm featuring it.

If you hope this book will tell you how to create successful projects, I want to disappoint you here. After all, if I can't disappoint you now, I'm unlikely to delight you later. I have not written this book to tell anyone what to do. Instead, I've written it with the idea of helping you discover and use what you already know. I've chosen this objective rather than the more common one of simply telling you what to do because I don't know what you should do. However, I believe that you probably already know most of what you need to know to create better projects. I have considerable practice helping others see their own experiences in more useful ways, so that's my objective here.

I intend to make some potentially shocking suggestions in this book. In a later chapter I will most outrageously suggest that you are presently powerful enough to transform your project work into something personally juicy. If you have no track record of creating such juiciness, my suggestions could either disturb or encourage you. I cannot know how you'll react. I want to warn you here, though, before you invest too much time reading this book, that by the time you finish reading it, you might discover some previously unknown sources of personal power and authority. This sort of discovery has always been and always will be dicey.

I've chosen to build this book out of stories. I think of these stories as parables rather than instructions. Parables are different from instructions in at least one very important way: While instructions present key learning points—what you should embrace or avoid—parables don't insist that you carry away any specific meaning from them. One day the parable might seem to mean one thing and another day something quite opposite. To me, this feature more closely tracks how the real world presents information, and since I can have no idea of your situation, we're probably both better off with this tactic than one where I pose as the expert and you as the novice. You're more experienced than a novice, and I'm expert enough to know that I'm not anybody else's expert. You are unavoidably the expert of your own experiences.

I'm writing this book to describe something that cannot be rationally explained: How is it that people continue engaging in project work, even though projects rarely meet their stated objectives? Our methods for making successful projects seem to take the soul out of them. Our insistence on planning straight and narrow pathways into the future frustrates the most expert among us, yet we persist.

I believe we persist because we either have experienced or aspire to encounter what I call coherence. Coherence is that state where we see the world through each other's eyes—where we quite magically catch ourselves seeing the world as others see it. Operational work separates tasks into isolated, homogeneous pieces, erasing this necessity and so depriving us of this possibility. But project work requires us to integrate our puzzle piece with the puzzle pieces of others, who are equally confused. Because of this, projects unavoidably transform us into blind men arrayed around an elephant and leave us struggling to comprehend an ungraspable whole. Our situation encourages us to pursue coherence because our collective success depends upon our integrating orthogonal (meaning really different, even more different than we expected to find) perspectives. This integration is coherence.

The most successful projects always feature coherent experiences, where the participants walk through cognitive walls together. In this timeless state within our time-bound undertakings, our project's goals pale compared with our passionate pursuit of our purpose. Yet the literature focuses on helping us get better at setting and achieving goals, even though that never turns out to be the purpose behind the most successful projects. How curious.

Creating this book has been a series of naive beginnings punctuated with unsettling information. In this process, a true community has emerged around this elephant, and within that community has come the coherence we each always secretly aspire to experience.

I extend my grateful prayers for all the prayers unanswered in this pursuit. As with all writers, my original goal was immediate acceptance. I appreciate my friends, colleagues, and teachers who each cared enough to deprive me of this hollow success. They each in their own way demonstrated their deep caring for me and my work by overlaying their perspectives onto my unavoidably naive beginnings. A higher quality elephant has emerged for us as a result.

The list of contributors is long and impossible to properly appreciate here. I will rely upon the continuing coherence within our shared adventure to properly acknowledge their contributions. For the record, though, these are the principal contributors to this remarkable result.

The earliest reviewers reassured me that I was on the right track. I appreciate my wife and partner, Amy Schwab; my dear friend and teacher Naomi Karten; my brother, III; my folks, Bob and Bonnie Schmaltz; my sisters, Kathy Carey and Carol Smith; Martine Devos; Antoinette Hubbard; Rich Van Horn; and my partner and dear friend Mark G. Gray.

I appreciate my son, Wilder Schmaltz. You brought the elephant and the blind men to life with your extraordinary drawings.

I appreciate my past, present, and future clients who read later versions of the manuscript and provided unwanted but sorely needed insights along with their endorsing comments: Mark Lewis, Rick Gemereth, Walt Syzonenko, Edgar Zalite, Jim Goughnouer, Bill Burnett, and Chuck Kolsted. I appreciate those friends and associates who agreed to read and comment on the work: Jerry Weinberg for finding the first draft unreadable, David Socha for calling me at a nightclub in Minneapolis with searing questions, Dan Starr for the boat ride and the humor, Joshua Kerievsky for an unnameable something, David Wilczewski for challenging questions, James Bullock for opting out, Randy Taylor for the long conversations, and Peter DeJager for considering the proposition; also Brad Reddersen, Brian Lassiter, and Susan Pecuch.

Special blind-men-arrayed-around-an-elephant appreciation for the manuscript reviewers, who read and commented at great and productive length: Thank you Don Yates, Dan Bieger, Irene Sitbon, Jeff Kulick, and Alis Valencia.

Thanks to my copy editor, Elissa Rabellino, for tolerating my feral grammar and making the parables sound right.

Thank you, Craig Neal, for connecting me with Berrett-Koehler, and thanks to the folks at Berrett-Koehler for engaging in the conversation, asking impossible questions, and dreaming big: Steven Piersanti, Jeevan Sivasubramaniam, Robin Donovan, Richard Wilson, and Michael Crowley.

And last but not least, my deep appreciation to Ivan Nahem for pointing out the Master/Slave relationship. It was right there but unacknowledged until you put a name on it.

David A. Schmaltz

Walla Walla, Washington

October 2002

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 酷酷太子妃

    酷酷太子妃

    陶夭夭,某户千金,十五岁芳龄。书读的不好,琴弹的不行,脾气还拽的惊人。总之是要才没才、要品没品。优点倒是还有两个,一个嘛,美人胚子绝世倾城红颜祸水,另一个呢,鬼灵精怪一肚子坏点子老想害人。谁知一朝破产家败如山倒,富家千金露宿街头变成了穷乞丐,爹爹没钱还债,心一横卖了自个闺女然后逃之夭夭……
  • 你见过长安吗

    你见过长安吗

    你见过长安吗?有多少见不到光的人,在让光芒洒向更多的大地?又有多少人,从未见过长安,却在不惜一切代价保护着长安?
  • 重生之小医女逃婚计

    重生之小医女逃婚计

    她医术超群,心地善良,医者仁心,穿越到了一个被架空的朝代,在这里活了整整八年,终于等到了桃花盛开的时候。可是为嘛剧情不按套路来呢?这位掌管军政大权的王爷,你这样做真的好吗?撺掇她青梅竹马的未婚夫带着心上人逃婚?好吧,她可以不计较,可紧接而来的赐婚圣旨是几个意思?她和他也没多熟好吧,谁要嫁给他,包袱款款想要逃婚,却发现整个江府都被他的人给包围了,连只苍蝇进出都得查个公母才能放行……1、江宝儿,在边关城镇救了怀王一命,人生从此偏离了轨道。她觉得自己最好的选择就是嫁给青梅竹马的易北哥哥了,可这位怀王好像有点恩将仇报啊,对她强娶豪夺的,有意思嘛!!!!2、怀王欧阳镜风,北朝掌管军权的战神王爷,世人都说他冷漠无情,连自己的生母都避让他三分,手中的权势再大,心底的空洞也无法弥补。可自从那个小丫头出现之后,一切都变了,他混沌黑暗的世界里多了一道光明,光明越来越盛,照亮他整片黑暗混沌的天空,他努力的想要抓住她,可他的手段似乎过激了,直到最后伤害了她……
  • 赛博伪神

    赛博伪神

    冰冷的机械齿轮,反英雄式的自我放逐,这是腺上激素与电极晶体的完美结合,这是人类机械的身体与人性的碰撞。极致的科技代表无神,而一个无可救药的疯子在毁灭的边缘翩翩起舞,想要成为高高在上的伪神,同时也在下意识地寻找自己的救赎之旅。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 无尽灵主

    无尽灵主

    无尽位面,一个残酷的世界,一个神奇的世界。在这个世界中,天地万物都在修炼,那些可以修炼的人或者其他的非人类,他们都有一个共同的名字、灵。在无尽位面里,弱肉强食,弱小的存在就只能是强者手中的玩物,生死不由己;强者,摘星拿月、毁天灭地,无所不能。看天地之间唯一的位面之灵转生成人,如何一步一步登临绝巅,成就灵主之位。
  • 彼此千年只要你

    彼此千年只要你

    前世:她含冤而死,他悔恨而去,一切的源头只是“爱”二十世纪:他寻寻觅觅的找寻,她却双耳失聪。待他找到她时,虐狗模式启动。
  • 真三之无双宗师

    真三之无双宗师

    别人穿越争霸天下,我却只想逍遥一生。别人穿越网罗众美,我却只想与一人常伴此生。别人穿越书写神话,我却只想做那世外仙翁。身处乱世,且看拥有一颗善良之心的宅男的心路历程。。
  • 星孤之道

    星孤之道

    隐约间接引了远古修士的学生石他山,沉睡两百年后,在科技高度发达的折叠宇宙,看到有远古气息的研究生实践地,明显散发类灵力的科幻超级英雄,这覆盖虚伪躯壳的世界,显然藏着惊天的秘密……有一天,他创立了星孤,树立宗旨曰:胸有侠者济世之情义,不弃冰冷科技树理性;行走远古修士之路径,智破折叠宇宙畅诗兴。
  • 驭灵大陆之绝代双星

    驭灵大陆之绝代双星

    精彩绝伦的驭灵大陆,特点各异的奇幻灵宠,天赋绝伦的蓝家大少,古灵精怪的天才小妹,朋友一路相随,最平淡的玄幻,最不虐男主的女主,一路横扫,不知不觉就站在了巅峰!(在热血的玄幻世界走上一条偏的十万八千里的路。)