Learning from Slime Mold : An article on how to survive and thrive in ever-changing environments

For years, I’ve found creative inspiration in slime mold. The elegance of this lifeform is extraordinary: when times are good, it’s a colony of individuals. When times are bad, the whole colony forms a single organism and makes a getaway. I use slime mold as a metaphor and learning inspiration for how organizations behave, adapt and how they can better embrace collective work.

In April, I shared my thinking about slime mold and organizational culture at the IA Summit in Memphis. There I met Stacy Surla, who invited me to write an article on the topic for theĀ  August/September 2009 issue of The Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology.

The article went live this week, so you can read the full story on learning from slime mold. Thanks to the great editorial team at the Bulletin for the guidance and editing work. We’re also excited that this article debuted video examples for the first time in Bulletin content.

[caption id=“attachment_3936” align=“alignnone” width=“300” caption=“Article in the August/September 2009 issue of The Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology”]Article in the August/September 2009 issue of The Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology[/caption]

You can read the full article here:

And to whet your appetite, check out this marvelous slime mold video by Thomas Gregor in Princeton University’s Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics. It shows the first 2 stages of the lifecycle.

I love slime mold

There are 3 comments on this idea.

Kate,

Thanks for writing this up!

I love it. I think we need to find more biological metaphors to help us understand the world. Especially in marketing where terms like “viral” dominate. I’d love to start hearing people talk about seeds that stick to our socks or the slime mold!

I truly loved the slime mold Boxes & Arrows podcast (4/24/09). In the bio tech / globalization era, ever attempting to shoot ahead of the next big flu, I think your examples will ring true to larger, if little wiser, life forms.

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