by Dwayne Phillips
Despite cries to the contrary, we want bias. Our individual bias is what makes us individuals. Do we really want everyone to be the same? I doubt it.
“We need to reduce bias,” said someone who meant well but wasn’t thinking things through.
I am biased. I like some things and dislike others. I tend to one type of solution over all others. I go to one coffee shop instead of all others. I eat much more rice than the great majority of Americans with the family name Phillips.
Just about everyone I have ever met is biased. They like this instead of that and go here instead of there.
Our biases make us individuals. If none of us had bias, if we were all the same, we would all be the same. Does anyone want all of us to be the same? I certainly don’t, and I am biased that way.
All this bias can be quite inconvenient at times. I mean, if folks would just see things my way…it would be awful boring and we would all make lots of needless mistakes.
Admit it. We are all biased, and that is a good thing. Let’s deal with it. We can do better.
Tags: Adults · Alternatives · Choose · Differences · Honesty · Humility
by Dwayne Phillips
This is a simple, two-word question. It is fundamental if someone is paying for my time. What is all the fuss about?
In the news recently, I find that a new advisor to a new executive asked all the employees to answer the basic question that is the title of this post. This all sounds pretty simple and innocent, but it raised a storm of biblical proportions.
Note: both the new advisor and the new executive in the news are polarizing persons. Many folks don’t like ’em. I am not naive about that. The management practice, however, is sound and is widely practiced.
I have written in the past about this two-word question. Someone pays me money for my time. They are entitled to know what I’m doing with my time. If I don’t want to answer their two-word question, I can quit the paying job.
Perhaps there is something wrong with me in the above beliefs. Perhaps.
Many management consultants provided their opinions on the management practice of asking, “Whatcha’ doin’.” It appears that only the negative views of of this management practice were published. Yes, this management practice can be bad in some circumstances. Yes, most of the time it is a basic that should be practiced. People cannot have other people hiding what they are doing.
This is government. Public employees are paid by the public to do public works publicly. Except for a few cases, when public employees ‘splain whatcha’ doin’, the answers can and should be for public consumption.
Then the management practice moves on to comparisons of “this is what we are doing” to “this is what we are supposed to be doing.” Then comes corrections of course and all that. A postal carrier is supposed to carry mail from the Post Office to the mailbox. If the postal carrier isn’t doing that, well, we need correction. This isn’t rocket science. Mundane? Maybe. It is government service. Generations of families have been supported by it. It is honest work. Let’s keep it honest and public.
Tags: Accountability · Communication · Government · Management · Questions · Work
by Dwayne Phillips
Want more efficient and more productive government? The solution is simple, but probably won’t be used.
Once every now and then, someone comes along and tries to make government more efficient and more productive. Note: this means more efficient and more productive than it is now. This does not mean truly efficient and truly productive, just better.
We see this now in the news as a new President with new advisors attempts new methods in search of efficiency and productivity. We also see that there are policies in place that create inefficiency and unproductive behavior.
I was an employee of our Federal government for 28 years. I have spent the following 17 years still working around our Federal government. I have seen the good, the bad, and the ugly.
We have rules and rules upon rules inside government to cause behaviors. As a wise person once told me many years ago, “Whenever you find a rule, you can find that it is in place because some persons were trying to cheat.” The rule attempts to stop the cheating by a few persons. The rule also cuts efficiency and productivity by the great majority of persons. The rule brings waste.
So, here is a solution: remove those rules and hire good, smart people.
Good people are ethical. They don’t lie, cheat, or steal. They behave well.
Smart people are smart. They see what needs to be done and they do it quickly and well.
Simple solution that removes all the rules that bring waste.
We won’t use this simple solution. We no longer seem to have a common definition or right and wrong (ethics). We don’t like seem to people who see what needs to be done and do it quickly and well.
Back to the drawing board or something. We can do better.
Tags: Accountability · America · Change · Competence · Ethics · Government · Improvement · Simple
by Dwayne Phillips
Much of the jargon we use doesn’t make sense. If we didn’t use the nonsense, no one would understand us.
We use jargon. I work in computers, and we are one of the worst offenders of jargon in communication. The jargon is nonsense. If I used real words, however, no one would understand me.
Consider: do you have your computing in the cloud or on premise?
First, we consider cloud computing. Cloud?
Cloud: noun, a visible mass of condensed water vapor floating in the atmosphere, typically high above the ground. OR a state or cause of gloom, suspicion, trouble, or worry.
What is the relation between computers in a data center hundred of miles away and condensed water vapor floating in the atmosphere? I have sought that relation for years and don’t have a clue. And then there is the dark cloud of gloom, suspicion, trouble, or worry. Calling a data center a cloud is closer to gloom, suspicion, trouble, or worry than anything else.
Second, we consider computers on premise.
Premise: noun, a previous statement or proposition from which another is inferred or follows as a conclusion.
People mean premises.
Premises: noun, a house or building, together with its land and outbuildings, occupied by a business or considered in an official context.
For some reason we drop the “s” at the end of the word as we want to save one byte of storage or something.
Cloud, premise: two simple yet common forms of nonsense. Yet we repeat the nonsense. We can do better.
Tags: Authentic · Clarity · Communication · Vocabulary · Word · Writing
by Dwayne Phillips
I can introduce problems by asking others to consider a specific example. Often, a general example works better.
Years ago, author and consultant Jerry Weinberg was leading a session on how to lead sessions. Jerry began with, “feel the sand between your toes on the exotic beach with the surf gently sounding in your ears.”
Then Jerry asked us to open our eyes and see the pained expression on the face of one of the women in the session. Jerry knew that she hated sand. Sand between the toes was torture.
Years later, I was at a session hosted by one of America’s highest-esteemed universities. The leader of the session provided a specific example of an analysis situation and asked that we work towards a solution. Two hours later, some participants were arguing the fine points of analysis and such instead of considering the point of the exercise.
These were cases where a specific example ruined things. People focused on the specifics of sand and analysis instead of on solving problems.
A better technique would be to speak in general terms such as:
Imagine the best place you want to be…
Imagine the mess you have and how a group of strangers might fix it…
Specific is good in most cases. Specific is bad when it can lead people off the tracks into endless arguments. We can do better.
Tags: Concepts · Context · Experiment · Learning · Problems · Teaching · Thinking
by Dwayne Phillips
This is a practice I recommend for non-fiction writing—especially writing where the writer is attempting to teach good practices.
I have written books and dozens of articles and other things recommending good practices. If you want to accomplish such and such, do this and that and the other thing.
And then I try to toss in the title of this blog post. Yeah, but. Okay, smart guy, if you have all the answers, what about? And there are lots of things I can always list that fit in the what-about category. If I am so smart, why doesn’t my advice work all the time? Why doesn’t my advice work even half the time?
It is at this moment where I try to admit in my writing that my advice, while well meaning and pretty good, flops many times. I don’t have all the answers; I don’t have the answers to many, many questions. No one’s advice has all the answers. There are too many persons involved with too many goals and wishes and dreams and hidden gripes.
I find it worth the time and space on a page to attempt to address the yeah, but statement.
For example, if asking yeah but is such a good practice, why haven’t I asked yeah but about the advice given in this blog post? Well, here it is. Ask yeah, but all the time. Even when the advice is to ask yeah, but. That question fails often. There are occasions when asking it is a waste of time. There are occasions when I should just say it, write it, and do it now!
The building is on fire. Leave now! No debate about yeah, but.
People have spent too much time reading my advice already. No more patience to read my yeah, but section.
Asking yeah, but about a post on yeah, but is too much meta questioning.
There. I cleared the air. I still recommend asking yeah, but…even when the topic is yeah, but.
I trust all this yeah, but hasn’t been too confusing. Yeah, but it is worth it perhaps.
Tags: Alternatives · Communication · Concepts · Consulting · Expertise · Knowledge · Writing
by Dwayne Phillips
Are we spending too much time and effort on making AI systems “safe?” Perhaps we should allow adults to be adults and move on.
Consider an LLM or whatever that creates text promoting:
- fill-in-the-blank with your least favorite group of people ever
- fill-in-the-blank with your least favorite philosophy ever
Those people, those philosophies are horrible!
Okay, are you an adult? If so, you can easily reject those horrible people and philosophies. If those people and philosophies are horrible, other adults will reject them as well. If some adults accept those horrible people and philosophies, they will suffer and who wants to be like them?
There is some merit to preventing some adults from seeing, hearing, reading, etc. some philosophies. For everyone else, however, adults can be adults and decide as adults.
I am writing about adults, not children. That is another topic for another day of writing.
All the efforts to make “AI safe,” i.e., not ever ever show horrible people and philosophies, are they worth the effort? And “horrible” is a subjective term with a definition that changes.
I recommend adulthood for adults. And I am sure I could find examples where that recommendation didn’t work well.
Tags: Adults · Artificial Intelligence · Choose · Data Science · Decide · Technology
by Dwayne Phillips
The first rule of consulting involves how much improvement a consultant can suggest at a time. Recent news highlights this rule and the peril caused by ignoring it.
There is an unwritten rule among smart consultants that you only suggest things that improve a situation by about 10%—no more.
If you suggest something simple that will increase productivity by 50%, you have embarrassed the current persons because they are managing a grossly ineffective and inefficient operation, i.e., they are ineffective and inefficient managers.
Mr. Musk et al are basically consultants trying to improve operations in the Executive Branch of our Federal government. These consultants, however, are breaking the unwritten rule and suggesting improvements that are so simple and effective as to embarrass the current operations persons. Hence, loud cries of angst are present.
Mr. Musk is new to consulting endeavors. He is accustomed to owning businesses wherein he directs, not consults. Perhaps he will learn in time to be more effective—perhaps not.
Tags: Accountability · Consulting · Expectations · Government · Improvement · Management · Remember
by Dwayne Phillips
Here is a suggestion to those folks who can make these augmented reality (AR) glasses that would help me as a writer and reader.
Last year I provided the world with a suggestion for a pencil that would link to a spelling checker and AI. And here is another AI-related suggestion for those folks who are making AR glasses.
I face a piece of writing: that could be text on a computer screen or a book or a piece of paper (even something written by hand and even in that ancient font known as cursive).
The AR glasses “see” the writing (that is a pretty good AI trick, but not all).
The AR glasses use the cloud or some other form of magic to recommend, summarize, suggest changes, translate, and all those things these chattering bots do these days. Those things appear in my view on my AR glasses.
Viola’. A miracle. Well, maybe not a miracle, but I would find this useful and helpful. Okay folks, get to it.
Tags: Artificial Intelligence · Cloud Computing · Technology · Visibility · Word · Work · Writing
by Dwayne Phillips
Sometimes some person has a significant achievement, but the resources weren’t approved, so it was all quite embarrassing.
This is a true story that occurred in the last century. A person at work had a neighbor who worked at a different government agency. The other agency had a colossal failure with some data recordings. The recordings were ruined as was all the data collected from the field in a year. A year wasted!
The person who worked at my agency told his neighbor to give him a recording. He brought the recording in to work (not allowed) and worked on recovering the data from it. He invented a method to recover the data from the ruined recordings. The neighbor gave him all the recordings from the year, he recovered all the data from a year’s worth of ruined recordings, and saved the other agency a year’s budget. Wow! Amazing! SIGNIFICANT!
Months later, a memorandum of thanks appeared on the desk of our agency’s director. It was personally from the director of the agency whose data had been rescued.
What was this? What rescue? What recovery? Who did this? What? Where? How? How much did it cost?
A month or two of digging, and the culprit was found. Someone performed unauthorized work for another agency and sneaked data in and out of a building (another unauthorized no no).
Yet, the director of our agency was lauded for great work. Well, you cannot refuse such adoration and thanks. You cannot fire and jail a hero. And you cannot reward such an unauthorized hero. If the word gets out, everyone will try to do good regardless of authorization and we just can’t have that. After all, there are legal restrictions.
I could tell several other stories of significant achievements that were, nonetheless, quite embarrassing. You can’t fire heroes. You can’t reward unauthorized heroes too visibly.
At this point, I am supposed to provide some lessons learned and words of wisdom. After all these years, I am still stumped. Sometimes persons achieve something significant that embarrasses many other persons. That’s life, and us smart folks shrug.
Tags: Accountability · Authentic · Chaos · Data Science · Emergency · Leadership · Work