Author Archives: Joseph Bentley

Voices from the Swamp

    January 6   PERSONAL REPORTS FROM THE SWAMP   John Maynard Keynes,  Economist: On the Great Depression of 1929-1939 We have involved ourselves in a colossal muddle, having blundered in the control of a delicate machine, the working of which we do not understand. Steve Rothmeier, Former CEO of Northwest Airlines I thought… Read More »

Dr. Groopman Discovers the Swamp

 December 15 On a sweltering morning in June, 1976, Jerome Groopman, a newly graduated MD, put on his starched white coat, placed a stethoscope in his black bag, and reported for duty.  At the time, he wasn’t fully aware that he was entering a swamp.  He soon found out! He had spent the previous four… Read More »

Rattlers and Pythons

November 9 When it comes to working on problems, and especially wicked ones, a key insight is “Structure is Always Better than Good Intentions!”  Success with problems is tied directly to creating a structured process for finding and attacking problems.  In the last post, I described two structured approaches to finding and dealing with organizational… Read More »

Messing with Mr. InBetween

October 20   During the difficult days of World War II, one of the most popular songs on everyone’s lips was an up-beat, optimistic, “sunny-side-of-the-street” tune by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer called Accentuate the Positive.  Introduced by Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters in the 1944 movie, Here Come the Waves,  it was sung in the… Read More »

Unnatural Acts

   September 30   Many people are afflicted with a dangerous and misguided myth:  Rugged Individualism.  They insist that they are independent, self-reliant, and able to make it by themselves,  without any help from others. Nothing could be further from the truth. Our lives are entirely dependent upon others in almost all ways, from the… Read More »

Wicked or Tame?

 July 10, 2014 Problems are either wicked or tame concluded Horst Rittle and Melvin Webber in the early 1970’s, an insight that has turned out not only to be interesting, but central to all attempts to solve problems.  Whether a problem is one or the other determines everything that follows:  what should be done, by… Read More »