Comment by mahirsaid

3 days ago

Something i said multiple times on here, with a less refined paraphrasing, and less articulate wording. The perception that the good will have a everlasting run is none-sense and drawn from the foul thought of being invincible. I read a book a wile ago called ( power of agility, agility, ...) and it illustrates the importance of agility. The book depicts the implication of agility and how agility applies to one's self to large enterprises, the thinking behind it is that "Agility" can be applied to a wide range of scenarios. Interesting enough i finished the book at the book store before buying it ( it was like a little over 100 pages), however i still remember what i read from that book and it stuck with me. The part that stuck to me from the book the most is the importance of being prepared to be agile in tough situation. The importance in affirming change in a scenarios that might seem stagnate but hide the true damage or negative impact on self or organization.

ill stop there about the book, but i think you get the point. The book was depicting the realities of both one's own life ups and downs, which includes a side comparison of a organizations reality. In many ways this isn't much different. The enabling aided by the government has increased many sectors of the US to not be agile or just toss the idea out the window " we don't need to be agile we'll just try to takeover this sector in Italy to increase revenue". Becoming comfortable with just creating alternatives to problems is not FIXING the problem that originates.