Blog
L'équipe Holaspirit
11 septembre 2023
-
3
min lire
Pleins feux sur les praticiens

Parler d'agilité avec le PDG d'OCTO Technology

Ludovic Cinquin is a Managing Director at Accenture and the CEO and Co-Founder of OCTO Technology. 

OCTO Technology – the very proud recipient of the 2021 Great Place to Work award in France – is an IT consulting, design, and implementation company.

Great Place to Work Award
OCTO Technology ranked #1 for companies with 250 to 1,000 employees


How do you do to keep the human element at the center of all your projects?


It starts with work habits where people collaborate together and meet frequently, which is difficult with lockdown.

We have this paradox that we put technology in place.

But the way in which it is implemented is through collaboration, through teamwork, through collective intelligence, which happens quite naturally. 


What is a “Liberated Enterprise” to you ?


I don't know if it's a very good term because it is an extremely loaded term that conveys a strong philosophy.

I think in the working world, we can use terms that are less divisive.

So I like Agile companies.

Teal organizations are also mentioned in Frédéric Laloux's book.

There’s "NextGen Enterprise" now with the book just released, written by Luc and Philippe.

What I find interesting about all these movements is the values behind them.

No matter what you call them, the more companies there will be, whether they say they are liberated, Teal, NextGen or Agile, I think it will be great. 


What are the values shared by these Next Generation Enterprises? 


There are several commonalities that can be found in almost all of these organizations.

There is the right to make mistakes and be autonomous.

There is the fact that we rely on trust and authenticity.

In Agile companies specifically, short cycles are prominent. So getting quick feedback by doing short iterations. 


How can we ensure that trust goes both ways in organizations, from managers to employees and employees to the top?

I think it’s the responsibility of culture and the management of a company.

As long as you put the right conditions in place, that is to say, you encourage people to work together and not compete. 

I think human beings are wired to trust the people they work with on a day-to-day basis. If we get rid of walls, confidence is an emerging phenomenon that I think is very natural.

Typically, it means not encouraging silos, that is to say discouraging all behaviour aimed at defining territories.

I think that bonuses or the absence of bonuses, so the pay system, is a cornerstone of any trust system. If, for example, we promote local objectives, we won't have cooperation, we won't have trust.

It is encouraging all initiatives that aim to put several people in the same room to work together, to work and not just to host meetings because when we solve problems together, it builds a bond and it builds trust.

It’s a host of ultimately simple strategies that we experiment every day, all of us in our daily lives, and that we have to manage to find in the business environment.

The above interview was recorded during the 2020 edition of The NextGen Enterprise Summit.

Révolutionnez votre façon de travailler dès maintenant !