In July, 2011, 45 scientists from around the world pooled their data and confirmed that the extinction of the dinosaurs and 70% of the species living on earth was caused by the impact of a gigantic asteroid 65 million years ago.
According to their calculations, the scientists speculate that the asteroid was approximately 9.5 km across and traveling at the leisurely speed of 69 thousand km per hour. It struck off the east coast of what is now Mexico, leaving an impact crater 38 km deep and 200 km across.
The pressure wave and the resulting fireball probably cleared most of the forest cover from the North and South American continents. It took 15 million years for the planet to recover.
The dinosaurs, however, never did. The resources required to maintain their massive bodies were gone. The species that survived, however, were more adaptable to the abrupt change that had taken place around them. The demise of the huge and powerful dinosaurs allowed for the emergence of the smaller, quicker mammals that inhabit the planet today.
Charles Darwin said, “It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones who are most responsive to change.” In other words, external environmental changes must initiate internal changes for the organism (or the organization) to survive.
Now, take a look at your organization. Are you now or are you becoming a corporate dinosaur? Have your policies, processes, behaviors and cultures evolved enough to ensure that you can adapt to the changing realities that we experience more and more frequently in business today?
Most of us like to think we’re prepared, yet studies show that 70% of all business change management initiatives FAIL to deliver the promised benefits.
Mathematician and philosopher John Allen Paulos wrote, “Uncertainty is the only certainty there is, and knowing how to live with insecurity is the only security.”
This means that for your organization to remain productive and relevant today, you must be changing and changing regularly. And this is especially true in large businesses, where your challenge is to keep your people thinking smaller and quicker.
After all, you never know when the next asteroid might come and wipe out a few more dinosaurs.
6.10.12
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