Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Stop! Please stop with the information fiefdoms!


Stop! Please stop with the information fiefdoms!


This will just be a short post to express something that continues to befuddle me:  information fiefdoms.  What do I mean by “information fiefdoms”?  This is the kind of organizational and individual behavior wherein a group or person withholds information from others for reasons that amount to self-protection or an ill-conceived notion of propriety.

Now in offering this, I want to be clear I completely get the need for secrecy in communication.  I understand the need for justifiable discretion in relaying personal matters.  I’ve held a fairly high level security clearance, so I understand the need to keep tight lipped about security related issues.  I even get the need to be careful about industrial espionage especially as I relates to intellectual property.  These are not creations of information fiefdoms, they are necessary protections within society.

What I am referring to here is the kind of organization or persons that simply hold information as a means to stifle others, to accumulate miss-gotten power, and to trade it as if it were currency.  Look, I am an open communicator; meaning that I have long learned that if I am the only one that knows a thing, it’s likely that is a bad situation.  Thus I pass along information as a norm unless I’m told otherwise and there is a good reason to withhold it.  I also believe that sharing more information aids in team building, empowers rather than stifles, and results in better outcomes over and against potential failures.  Yet I continue to encounter people and organizations that are much more interested in “protecting their [information] turf” than they are in helping to make themselves and others successful.

You’ve encountered them I am sure.  The folks that don’t want to share slides from a presentation, or those that don’t include you in a CC on an email, or places that have cultures where being seen chatting with someone in another department might lead to a probing interrogation when you get back to the office about what was being discussed as if you were off the reservation to have even talked with them.  Its places where you routinely are told about things way too late to contribute meaningfully and the rumor mill is so maligned that it causes your head to spin.  Its places where “blow-ups” happen in frequent enough cycle that you can feel another one about to strike well ahead of its inevitable eruption and where morale is low and seeming on a path to go lower.  It’s places and people that rather solve one-on-one rather than engage teams or flee from public meetings and scrutiny in favor of the backroom deal.  Further, it is a place where leaders as quashed not made and its people that are self-engrossed or focused on self-enrichment (in power, prestige, or treasure) rather than selflessly serving.  It’s about creating a fiefdom out of what you know and what you hold as information, not a community where we being open and honest and sharing enables everyone to grow and learn and accomplish much more than the sum of their parts.

So I just have to say it, stop it with the information fiefdom creating.  Tear down the information hogging pens and let things get out of the barn.  Sure, occasionally things can get a bit haywire and run a bit wild, but you can rein that in by demonstrating the value of the group and the need to share appropriately so as to fulfill a vision everyone can buy into.  Leaders share information, they aren’t afraid of it.  Leaders are the ones that aren’t afraid of bad news, and are instead the first to relay it.  Leaders communicate first, and listen always.  Being the holder of an information fief is the opposite of that, it hurts you and it hurts those organizations that trade in such methods.  Don’t be afraid of information, be the one that enables it to flourish around you.

So stop, stop building information fiefdoms.  Instead, build networks of sharing.  You’ll be glad you did.

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