20 December 2021
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14 ways you're sabotaging your organisation

On 17 January 1944, the Office of the Strategic Services of the CIA issued the Simple Sabotage Field Manual. The manual remained classified for decades, becoming declassified in 2008.

The purpose of the manual was to present suggestions for inciting and executing sabotage.

The manual is full of 1940s references such as ‘axis nationals’, the latter no doubt falling victim to many of the manual’s methods.

The manual breaks methods down into the following categories:

  • Buildings (for example, ‘whenever possible, arrange to have the fire start after you have gone away’);
  • Manufacturing;
  • Mining and Metals;
  • Agriculture;
  • Transportation;
  • Water;
  • Communications;
  • Electric Power; and
  • General Interference with Organisations and Production

General Interference with Organisations and Production

What’s striking about this section of the manual is that it sounds like a lot of the dated management practices that plague large organisations today. These practices continue to sabotage their efforts when it comes to creating an environment where stuff gets done, people are motivated to go to work and the organisation can innovate at the pace required to keep up with change.

Find below some excerpts from the manual insofar as organisational interference is concerned and examples of how this shows up in many large organisations today.

In the immortal words of the one and only George Costanza, companies would be well served to “do the opposite” of whatever the manual suggests.

For the full Sabotage Manual head over to this link.

For more content like this head over to www.collectivecampus.io/blog

This article was originally published in Collective Campus

Copyright © The Impact Lawyers. All rights reserved. This information or any part of it may not be copied or disseminated in any way or by any means or downloaded or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of The Impact Lawyers. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the positions or policies of The Impact Lawyers.
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