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LF11 - Cohort Futures
Cohorts - inside the organization, outside the organization - are the operating logic of new things. Cohorts bring more futures within arm’s reach.
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
Businesses and individuals operating in uncertain environments and looking to do new things (“innovation”) need operating principles that enable and empower new outcomes.
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
cohorts deliver unexpected outcomes. And here’s why you should really care about cohorts - businesses and individuals operating in uncertain environments and looking to do new things (“innovation”) need operating principles that enable and empower new outcomes.
Cohorts - inside the organization, outside the organization - are the operating logic of... See more
Cohorts - inside the organization, outside the organization - are the operating logic of... See more
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
And if communities are spaces for belonging, cohorts are spaces for becoming.
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
But what comes after belonging?
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
If the web’s first promise was low cost, real-time connection, its second was community - anyone, anywhere, could find a place where they belong.
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
If we move up Maslow’s hierarchy, the answer might be becoming.
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
A dazzle of Slack bases, Discords, Telegrams, and Circles later, and it feels like we’ve arrived somewhere. Maybe it’s the post-social media era, where people move off the open platforms and into a curated mosaic of niche, private, and cooperative spaces. Or, maybe it’s just that the web we needed was here when we needed it.
Brian Dell • LF11 - Cohort Futures
The primary difference between a community and a cohort is that the first is oriented around the relationships between the collective members, and the second is oriented around the progress of each individual. In short, communities are built to connect, cohorts are built to progress.