Hi, my name is Tomomi.

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The view from my bedroom

The view from my bedroom

Week 16, 2020 - From behind open windows

April 20, 2020 by Tomomi Sasaki

Week 16! Since my last entry 12 weeks ago, I had a string of travel and then COVID-19 and confinement hit and now, here we are, painfully transitioning into another kind of era.

Of those twelve weeks, four have been in "confinement" at home in Paris. I'm one of those fortunate to be able to stay at home, where we swing between fighting against anxiety and fighting against inertia. Time feels like it's stretching and contracting at once.

It seems as good as time as any to dig myself out of this surreal limbo state. I won't backfill the weeknotes, but simply re-start.

April 20, 2020 /Tomomi Sasaki
Ningbo at night

Ningbo at night

Week 4, 2020

January 26, 2020 by Tomomi Sasaki

I spent a few days in Ningbo and then Shanghai for a small family reunion. Wow, it’s been more than a decade since I’ve had a chance to visit mainland China and I was super curious to experience first-hand their mobile technology.

I found it’s the type of convenience that comes with a feeling of brittleness. What happens when the tech fails? Getting locked out of a WeChat account, losing access to an Alipay account etc. would grind your daily life to a halt. The un-traceability of cash and paper tickets is a nice option that I’d not really thought about before. Overall, the taste I got for centralized transactions was fascinating and disconcerting in equal measures. It’s a parallel universe to the Western-centric digital world that I reside in, and the majority of the population from either side don’t particularly seem to be concerned about that.

Sadly, it wasn’t the best timing to be exploring China. We made the decision to cut the trip short amidst mounting uncertainty about the new corona virus.

Reading:

  • 直観の経営 「共感の哲学」で読み解く動態経営論 by 野中 郁次郎, 山口 一郎 (link) - I hadn't realized that Ikujiro Nonaka of SECI model of knowledge dimensions fame was still a prolific author! This book is about the philosophy of empathy, written with a phenomenologist.
  • 引き抜き屋 1 鹿子小穂の冒険 and 引き抜き屋(2) 鹿子小穂の帰還 by 雫井 脩介 (link) - Skimmed through this novel about executive head hunters, to try something different. Shallow and unrelateable characters but interesting tidbits about this industry.
January 26, 2020 /Tomomi Sasaki
One of our favorite venues, just a few minutes from Shibuya Crossing

One of our favorite venues, just a few minutes from Shibuya Crossing

Week 3, 2020 - Running uphill

January 24, 2020 by Tomomi Sasaki

This was the second half of my time in Tokyo, which I typically start by longing to go home. Health deteriorates, sleep quality is in the pits and energy is low. But activities are full-on, interesting opportunities continue to present themselves and I somehow find pockets of time to connect yet a few more dots. It’ll pay off in the following months.

Ended the week by going to the neighborhood library to pick up a few books for next week. They’ve rebuilt it from the ground up and it’s an amazing community space with everyone from babies to grandpas.

Client work

I took part in a user research project and spent a few afternoons designing a dashboard for another, so I feel grounded in practice. Too many workshop-only projects and short consulting gigs will dull the sword. Gotta keep doing the doing.

[Projects] Design Research Tokyo

Ran a ResearchOps 101 event, building on activities by the ResearchOps community. The prep was more stressful than I’d anticipated and so I was especially heartened to get positive feedback from an audience that I’ve come to know fairly well. To be continued when I’m back home in Paris, so that other communities can organize introductory events about operationalizing research. It was a blast to go out with the DRT organizer team two weeks in a row :)

[Projects] Secret upcoming project

Got together with Sachiko to feel out the edges of what we want to do and how we might go about doing so.

Reading:

コミュニケーション力を引き出す 演劇ワークショップのすすめ by 平田オリザ (link) - I was keen to learn more about how workshops are utilized in stage theater, especially by Hirata Oriza who uses them extensively to work out his scripts. This book offered a fresh perspective on tackling typical org culture topics like encouraging communication and creativity by using theater activities as a tool. Unsure how much I’ll be able to apply it myself but it was interesting how sensitive he is to how participants react to certain situations. Negativity, shyness, being boisterous or rebellious - these are all human reactions that need to be incorporated into the dynamics of the room. I’ve long stopped using the lens of “difficult participants” as I find it self-centered but Hirata takes it to another level with the normality in which he anticipates and rolls with these reactions.

January 24, 2020 /Tomomi Sasaki
View from the 15th floor of the new Shibuya Scramble Building. The floor itself is not that high but it offers a different perspective of Shibuya.

View from the 15th floor of the new Shibuya Scramble Building. The floor itself is not that high but it offers a different perspective of Shibuya.

Week 2, 2020 - Feeling home in Tokyo

January 23, 2020 by Tomomi Sasaki

I had a strong first week at work, with lots of hearty discussions and a string of lunches and dinners with friends and peers. I was introduced to about a dozen people whom I’m sure I’ll meet again sometime. On Saturday I attended a talk event about the popularization of philosophy as a current business trend, which added a few books to my wish list. Afterward, I visited a colleague’s home to see the kids, had dinner with another, and ran into two people I knew on the street. Feeling right at home in Tokyo!

[Projects] Design Research Tokyo:

  • I had the chance to participate in a DRT book club event for once, instead of just helping to plan it from afar! Having the space to geek out about stuff is such an adrenaline boost.

  • Worked out rough plans for February and March events.

January 23, 2020 /Tomomi Sasaki
From Hakkoda Ropeway

From Hakkoda Ropeway

Week 1, 2020 - Clean and white

January 23, 2020 by Tomomi Sasaki

An auspicious start to the new year at the northern tip of the main island of Japan, with good food, good view and even better company.

[Projects] Researcher Skills Framework:

  • Worked out the outline of an upcoming IxDA talk with Dave

  • Sent in another conference workshop proposal with Dave

Reading:

  • Sam Ladner: Mixed Methods: A short guide to applied mixed methods research (link) - For an upcoming DRT book club. I need to finish it up next week and work on slides for my assigned section. Great to get the book version of the masterclass webinar I took last year.

  • The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures: Simple Rules to Unleash A Culture of Innovation
    by Henri Lipmanowicz, Keith McCandless (link) - LS has been on my list of things to investigate for a few years, and I finally started reading the book. It’s way more than the descriptions of workshop activity patterns (structures) that I was expecting! Relevant to an ongoing client project, so I’m inspired to take this to the next step.

January 23, 2020 /Tomomi Sasaki
Try new sports

Try new sports

Week 52, 2019 - Tokyo

December 31, 2019 by Tomomi Sasaki

I’m in Tokyo for the winter holiday! Plenty of time to catch up with friends and family, eat good food and finish up the year.

I’m glad to be doing these week notes. They’re not as in-depth as they used to be but they’re actually getting written on a weekly basis which feels more important. I plan to continue jotting down some thoughts and adding a photo every week in the coming year.

Reading:

  • Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman by Yvon Chouinard (link) - I finished my sister’s copy in a few days, great food-for-thought as the question of organizational purpose becomes more and more critical in our business.

December 31, 2019 /Tomomi Sasaki
IMG_3129.jpeg

Week 51, 2019 - Closing up shop

December 23, 2019 by Tomomi Sasaki

An in-between week, as we work towards wrapping up the year while trying to conserve enough energy to get us there. Paris is less festive than previous years due to the gravity of the nation-wide strikes which continue through the holidays. Making our way through the city means a lot of walking, and walking through tense demonstrations and a lot of traffic. People are getting by but I feel there’s a collective sign of relief to welcome Christmas family time. I’m also glad to do a Big Clean and head to Tokyo, where there will be a much stronger sense of closure as we prepare to greet the next decade.

I’ve got a few personal projects in the queue for the next two weeks. I’m happy with the books I’ve read over the past month but it’s time to switch from consuming to producing mode.

Unrelated, a recent realization: I revel in the emergence phase of a project. I am elated bouncing off ideas with someone and the quality of thinking correlates to my overall happiness with a project. I knew that already. What I hadn’t realized was that I get really testy when the fragile space needed for that work is not respected. And I get despondent when I don’t have a buddy to explore with. Our triggers are our triggers, might as well know them?

December 23, 2019 /Tomomi Sasaki
A scene from the community garden in my neighborhood

A scene from the community garden in my neighborhood

Week 50, 2019 - Staying close to home

December 15, 2019 by Tomomi Sasaki

It’s been a quiet week. No travel, no workshops, no deadlines.

I spent a big chunk of my week writing a project overview deck, which sounds unexciting but was actually quite important. A meaty piece of content that captures in one place what we mean to achieve, a statement piece that a project could be rallied around, which we could refer back to again when things seem unclear. It took a lot out of me but I’m glad it exists now. Projects need its purpose to be articulated and shared, and it’s too often replaced by some kind of project plan. But people don’t rally around a plan.

December 15, 2019 /Tomomi Sasaki
Epic sunset over the Channel

Epic sunset over the Channel

Week 49, 2019 - Let’s take the time

December 09, 2019 by Tomomi Sasaki

This week started off with two long days of user research in the UK, which both shortened and lengthened the feeling of the week! I took it easy on Wednesday so by the time Friday rolled around, I wasn’t too sure which day of the week it was….

First hand field research experience is critical to a project member’s ability to contribute and perform. Spending time in the genba gives us the anchor to be truly useful, and not let ourselves get caught in the follies of egos and organizational matters.

I’m making my way through “Nonviolent Communication: Create Your Life, Your Relationships, and Your World in Harmony with Your Values” by Marshall B. Rosenberg and “Clean Approaches for Coaches” by Marian Way. The former was because more than a few friends around me in Paris have gotten into NVC, and the different parts of the story they told over the years culminated into a strong interest. The latter is a continuation of my exploration of Clean Language after reading about Systemic Modelling, and combining my interest in pursuing coaching skills.

So it was a bit of a coincidence to start on two books that present approaches that are complimentary to one another - as far as I can currently tell, anyway. They both have similar starting points, in separating an observation from an often-emotional reaction, in order to analyze the underlying intention or need behind the observed action. Another similarity is the focus on spoken language as the key medium or material to play with.

I think the meta-learning here is about slowing down. Take in the present for a moment (or two!) before charging ahead, which typically results in hurting others but also ourselves. And to let that more steady response increase the likelihood of circumstances moving in our favor.

The idea of clarifying intent is very interesting to me because design is all about intent. So I’m hoping that after I’ve swam in these ideas for a while more, the connections with design will emerge and I’ll be able to synthesize them more deeply.

December 09, 2019 /Tomomi Sasaki
At a hotel bar in Frankfurt, Germany.

At a hotel bar in Frankfurt, Germany.

Week 48, 2019 - One last drink

December 04, 2019 by Tomomi Sasaki

It’s been an incredibly long week, and I’m dumbstruck by how flattened I feel by the sheer volume of work that I put in. But it’s been a great lesson on how critical it is to be able to enjoy time spent together as a team, as a rock-solid foundation of any effort we put in. And there are the moments spent together on actual work, and the moment spent in between - the breaks, the lunches, the chit chat on our chat apps, and that last drink where we don’t talk about work.

December 04, 2019 /Tomomi Sasaki
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