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Features
Letter from the editor For the past two decades or so, professional service firms of all kinds have been trying to get their hands around the subject of knowledge and especially how to work with knowledge effectively. Inspired by consultants, journalists, management writers, etc., there has been a substantial movement to do something about knowledge, which has had a particular appeal to those firms whose knowledge was obviously the source of their wealth-management consulting firms. Law firms led the movement within professional service firms, followed by a host of other knowledge-based firms. We can characterize this movement historically from what these and many other organizations focused on when they initially tried to manage this elusive thing we call knowledge. More
Over the last several decades, we have learned a lot about
building cars efficiently, and profitably, from Toyota. The Toyota
Production System (TPS) has come to be known by the term
Lean around the world. Toyota and other successful
manufacturing companies have learned that Lean does not just apply
to the value-adding employees on the shop floor. Since 80 percent
of waste does not occur on the manufacturing floor, there is a lot
of improvement needed in office and support function areas. What
Toyota learned to apply to manufacturing in the 1990s has since
blossomed to all types of organizations. Many companies in the
service industry are adopting Lean techniques with great success.
The same principles that are practiced on the shop floor are
relevant for service companies, hotels, hospitals, banks,
insurance, and construction companies. One of the key elements of
Toyotas success is properly identifying problems and solving
them. Thats where the 8 Wastes fit in. More
Measuring and Managing Quality and Performance at the
Firm Level: The Quest for Business Intelligence We all want better answers, and we want them faster. We want to manage with more intelligence; we want to make the best decisions possible. Unfortunately, most firms do not possess the tools that will help them find the type and the quality of answers they need to important questions regarding operational performance, strategy, predictive analysis and team effectiveness. However, a new breed of business intelligence systems is emerging within the corporate world. The aim is to provide fully-integrated, relevant and actionable information that blends a historical view with a directional outlook. Design firms need the same kinds of tools, and while such a solution remains elusive in the present, I predict its arrival will be swift and certain. More
Multi-generational Leadership Roles for Architects:
Design, Sustainability and Leadership in Local and Regional
Communities For a panel presentation at the AIA 2008 National Convention, we wanted to unite a diverse group of leaders who are changing our built environment locally and regionally with design and the environment in Nebraska. The session discussed how these diverse leaders including young architects, established professionals and retired architects, are working to educate and advocate for a range of issues involved in the context of the Heartland. The panel presented a series of case studies examining multi-generational leadership roles held by architects working in design and sustainability in order to bring about positive civic and community change for all people across this region. More
The Value Proposition: Moving the Profession from Best
Value to Added Value AIA National is taking a new look at its brand, starting with
the theme of the 2008 convention: We the People. The AIA proposes
to move beyond health, safety and welfare and toward a path that
demonstrates our inseparable position within the most
pressing issues of our time. In order to meet this lofty
goal, we have to move beyond best value, the balancing act between
the art, craft and business of architecture, and toward added
value, design that is so smart, thoughtful and inspiring that it
significantly influences communities and key players in society.
Let me give you a small example from my own experience. More In Generations (1991), Strauss and Howe proposed the theory of
generational cohorts, where every generation of twenty or so years
reacts to and is part of the previous generations systems and
framework. In 2000 they published Millennials Rising. This work
investigated the emergence of the Millennials, born 1982 to 2001,
and their relationship and involvement with their previous
generations, the Boomers and Generation X (GenX, or Xers). In
contrast to the downbeat and alienated youngsters familiar to their
own childhood, Strauss and Howe suggested that this new generation
would be engaged and upbeat. They accounted this to their
Generational Awakening theory, casting Millennials as
the next great generation, even comparing their potential to the
last great generation, that of the GI WWII vets. More Tens of thousands of high school students across US take an
architectural drafting course each year. While students who emerge
from these courses often become highly proficient in CAD and
rendering software, many students lack both an understanding of
architectural concepts and the skills to look critically at the
built environment around them. Many high schoolers are also not
typically exposed to the design process, sustainable principles, or
influential contemporary and historic buildings. Resources 2008 AIA Practice Management Fall
Conference With this issue we present a new feature, the Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) corner. This will be a featured IPD article in each issue intended to help firms understand the promise and challenge of Integrated Practice. This months feature is entitled Integrated Project Delivery and the Fully Engaged Emerging Professional, and is written by Zigmund Rubel. More |
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