Attention is the perceptual field in which an organization takes shape. Not “focus” in a personal productivity sense, but infrastructure. What becomes relevant, what stays unseen and which signals arrive too late because they were never recognized as signals.
Situated in the Blueprint: Attention is a basic condition of inner architecture. It decides which world becomes visible at all.
→ Blueprint
How you can tell (signals)
Signales are early indications – before symptoms become expensive.
- The same topics repeat, but the view becomes narrower, not clearer.
- Meetings produce defence rather than insight (reporting replaces seeing).
- Metrics dominate, yet nobody can say what they reveal about the field.
- “We have no time” becomes the default formular (attention gets swallowed by cadence).
- Relevant issues appear only when they burn – late surprises become normal.
- More information is mistaken for better perception: “we know more” replaces “we see better”.
Common misread:
A “communication problem” is often an attention problem: it’s not lack of messages, it’s lack of perception that can notice differences.
What is actually at work (casual logic)
Attention is selective. An organization never sees “everythting” – it sees what it is built to see. This selectivity is not neutral: it shapes risk, learning capacity and the ability to act.
- What becomes possible? Early recognotion of tipping points, side ffects, opportunities.
- What becomes unlikely? Learning before escalation, change without surprises.
- What does it cost when it collapses? Reactive steering, overcontrol, false certainty.
- What signals recovery? The system can name distinctions: What is actually new here? What is just louder?
Levers (small interventions that can start small)
Lever 1 – Create signal spaces
Build short, recurring formats that don’t report, but see. What changed? Which signals are new? What are we not noticing? Start small: 15 minutes weekly, three questions, one decision or one experiment.
Lever 2 – Decouple attention from status
When attention is tied to status (“who speaks counts”), perception goes blind. Use forms that make signals independent: silent collection, curated observations, rotating “observer” roles.
Lever 3 – Make measurement serve perception, not control
KPIs often act as control instruments and loose contact with the field. Ask: Which metric makes something visible we would otherwise miss? Add 1-2 qualitative indicators that “read between the numbers”.
Workshop: a form to test (10-20 minutes)
Attention Scan (15 minutes)
Four prompts:
- What are we not noticing?
- Which signals keep recurring?
- Where are we reporting instead of seeing?
- What is the smallest test that would increase clarity?
→ Workshop/thinkspace/workshop
→ Direct (palceholder): the attention scan is under construction yet
Reference (Working Papers / DOI)
Related papers (placeholders):
- Architecture of Attention – Working Paper (DOI)
→ this working paper is under construction yet - Signals vs. Symptoms – Working Note (DOI)
→ this working paper is under construction yet
Connections (constellations work together)
- Metis: without attention, navigation becomes blind.
→ Metis - Unfinishedness: without provisionality, perception becomes defensive
→ Unfinishedness - Coherence: without joinability, attention turns political
→ Coherence
Entry points
- 10 minutes: run an Attention Scan and name one signal
- Concrete issue: test Lever 1 (signal spaces) for two weeks
- Citable grounding: use the paper hub and cite the DOI
Next
→ Constellations overview: Constellations
→ Snapshot Review Snapshot Review: Constellation
