tobleis

Six co-workers in purple space

Red + blue = purple

In my first post about remote working I introduced the five ingredients for successful remote work. Today I cover the first one – the purple space. It is a concept invented by Line Jehle in her book Closeness at a Distance: Leading Virtual Groups to High Performance. You can also find a quick introduction in this article. The three elements of the purple space For me the purple space is one of… Weiterlesen »Red + blue = purple

Treasure #2 – Remote working, complexity and lean startup

The first nugget is on remote working and is a podcast. Lisette Sutherland from Happy Melly already has 147 episodes full of experience reports, tipps, tricks and tools on remote working: http://www.collaborationsuperpowers.com/podcasts/ The second nugget is a book co-authored by Line Jehle who I introduced in my recent post about remote working. The book is a collection of knowledge and tools for managers who are dealing with global dispersed and… Weiterlesen »Treasure #2 – Remote working, complexity and lean startup

Treasure #1 – All about change & finding ideas

Here we go with my first treasure. If you don’t know what the category treasure means, you can find an explanation in the post New categories and publishing cadence. Since change had been the topic on this blog for the past 3 weeks, the first item is a collection of blog posts about change. Many of them are in German, but you’ll also find a few in English (search the page… Weiterlesen »Treasure #1 – All about change & finding ideas

New categories and publishing cadence

In my last post I indicated to change my categories. The basketball categories didn’t work for me and I assume readers didn’t get it either. The goals of my blog are still the same. I want to: Share learnings/experiences/ideas on business topics and get your feedback. Collect and comment interesting publications on the web From time to time share my travel experiences or interesting events In addition I want to establish… Weiterlesen »New categories and publishing cadence