My recent post, Giving Meaning to the Work: It’s How You REALLY Engage Millennials, led to an invitation to join the “IBM Wild Ducks” group on LinkedIn.
The name alone is intriguing, so I had to do some research.
Apparently, the name comes from former IBM Chairman Thomas J. Watson, Jr., who said (emphasis mine):
In IBM we frequently refer to our need for ‘wild ducks.’ The moral is drawn from a story by the Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, who told of a man who fed the wild ducks flying south in great flocks each fall. After a while some of the ducks no longer bothered to fly south; they wintered in Denmark on what he fed them. In time they flew less and less. After three or four years they grew so lazy and fat that they found difficulty in flying at all. Kierkegaard drew his point: you can make wild ducks tame, but you can never make tame ducks wild again. One might also add that the duck who is tamed will never go anywhere any more. We are convinced that any business needs its wild ducks. And in IBM we try not to tame them.”
The line in bold is the crux of the story – “You can make wild ducks tame, but you can never make tame ducks wild again.”
How do you tame wild ducks in the workplace? There are several ways:
For more on the IBM Wild Ducks culture, watch the video below (or available here). Created as part of the IBM Centennial celebration, the video shares insight from four IBM customers who are themselves Wild Ducks. I particularly appreciated these points:
How does your organization keep your “Wild Ducks” flying? What absurd gestures are you recognizing? What resistance are you helping overcome?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksQrJh7s7N0
You can find more from Derek Irvine on his Recognize This! blog.