THIS BLOG HAS MOVED TO WWW.MK5060.COM AS OF 5 JUNE 2013. THIS BLOGGER SITE WILL NO LONGER BE MAINTAINED I have a passion for developing the capacities of people of all ages and cultures. My company MK5060 specialises in complex cooperations between people and organisations with a focus on knowledge institutions including science centers, museums and libraries. This blog allows me to explore these passions on a strategic, tactical, operational and rather more reflective level.
Pagina's
MK5060 full circle projects

vrijdag 30 maart 2012
Riding my bicycle
I cycle past this poster hanging in a shop window in Noordeinde every Wednesay on my way to Europeana. I find it hugely inspiring and I thought I'd better get off my beloved bike for a sec and take a picture of it. It signals my own steps in focussing solely on MK5060 and the preserves but also the steps we are making in furthering Europeana's event organising activities. The first half year of this organisation features a stack of events. Some small, some large, some for the public and some on a high policy level. Some more complex, some relatively straight forward. Over the past months we have established event teams and accompanying work processes, including roadmaps, event briefs and the likes. Working from the perspective that the content side and the operational side need each other to produce the envisaged event.
For me it is a shift from the hands on project management work to an advisory role. Although I am probably still a very hands on advisor:-). I find that the advisory role really adds another layer to my work allowing me to transfer my experience and to grow in another role. To continuously move between strategy, content, operational and team building. Balancing between the need for processes and people. As such it adds a new depth for me as well to my my experience, which by now somebody ever so kindly pointed out spans over 15 years. Ooops. Yes, grey hairs are showing around the temples. Growing older, yes. Wiser....I'd better leave that up to you....
woensdag 21 december 2011
Merry Xmas and an adventurous 2012!
Yes, a picture from our own collection, taken in Pingyao, China in 2010 on our travels. For those of you who wonder about it: the haircut is real, no photoshop! It was high fashion amongst kids then....or is that parents:-)?
For sure 2011 was a year full of experiences. I've travelled a road over the course of this year that has given me much, so much to think about. For all I like about being a freelancer what I definitly dislike is the being alone. Of course I work in a network. I have close friends and very close colleagues who give me support, feedback and who help me to develop. But having colleagues is special. Being part of a team, helping to build a team, that is so incredibly special. And for some reason that seemd the common denominator of all my projects this year! The universe provides I believe?! So thank you for allowing me to strengthen your ranks Science Center Delft, educational department of NEMO, The European Library (and through them Dublin Core), Europeana, Erfgoed Nederland and my first client ever and longest client DEN. Thank you for the companianship you gave me, the chances and the trust in me you handed to me so confidently. I have many blogs to write including a couple of views from the backoffice. But that will be something for tomorrow or early 2012. For now for me is a time for thank you's and I could not possibly go into my Christmas holidays without having said them loud and clear. So here you are: thank you. I look forward to seeing you next year!
For sure 2011 was a year full of experiences. I've travelled a road over the course of this year that has given me much, so much to think about. For all I like about being a freelancer what I definitly dislike is the being alone. Of course I work in a network. I have close friends and very close colleagues who give me support, feedback and who help me to develop. But having colleagues is special. Being part of a team, helping to build a team, that is so incredibly special. And for some reason that seemd the common denominator of all my projects this year! The universe provides I believe?! So thank you for allowing me to strengthen your ranks Science Center Delft, educational department of NEMO, The European Library (and through them Dublin Core), Europeana, Erfgoed Nederland and my first client ever and longest client DEN. Thank you for the companianship you gave me, the chances and the trust in me you handed to me so confidently. I have many blogs to write including a couple of views from the backoffice. But that will be something for tomorrow or early 2012. For now for me is a time for thank you's and I could not possibly go into my Christmas holidays without having said them loud and clear. So here you are: thank you. I look forward to seeing you next year!
donderdag 10 november 2011
Sheer happiness
It's been a while since I last blogged here. Nothing but good news though. Actually: the best. Upon our return from our fateful journey through the east we threw a lot of balls up in the air. EthicsEnterprise together with my mate Elisa Dijkhuis, Picnic in the Park and also I reopened MK5060. And all are taking off now it seems. Which is slightly miraculous to me. But above all a confirmation that I made the right choice somehow.
At the start of this year I was in doubt as to what I wanted to do. I seriously thought and even acted upon an urge to find colleagues and a steady job. Mainly because of personal development reasons. I had a couple of chats and made a U-turn back to being self employed. Wholeheartedly. As that is the form that seems to allow me to follow the paths that feel right to me even though they do not seem to make any sense to the outside world. And come to think of it: usually they don't make any sense to me:-) I just tend to take a road that opens itself as it feels right. Of course I make plenty of mistakes, but hey: I get to apologise and mend them as well.
That U-turn back to self employment for now seems to be the true path. Really. And that is what I so much want to share. EthicsEnterprise has brought me the colleague I longed for and the opportunity to explore and expand my background in ethics. Discovering new roads. Finding our way in voicing our very own Ethics Enterprise sound. Which is a wonderful road of personal development as well as a development in partnership. MK5060 is well and truly reopened. I cannot express enough thanks to those who helped me to do so: science centers, library organisations....well: you know who you are. I thank you from the bottom of my heart. How cool (or rather: WARM) is it when you decide to re-open and people call you with the message that they would like to help you get back on your feet. When people continue to do so. Offering warm surrounding to work with truly wonderful people.
Yes, a pause here. Because that is what happened. I am in awe.
Picnic in the park is my (and our, as in my and my husbands) most recent undertaking. For now we're seriously but simply exploring where that road will lead us. Letting it grow organically, planning ahead a bit but not to much and mainly being focussed on maintaining the quality of our products. With step by step professionalisation. Focussing on our dreams of connecting preservering recipes through the ages and throught cultures.
Believe me: for the life of me at the start of 2011 I had not dared to dream that this year would turn out this way. Is it bussy? Heck, yes. And sure, it has it's ups and downs. Time is short with so many things needing attention. When the pressure gets on I can become truly very Dutch, very straight. At times loosing the precious balance between quality, time and cost. But somehow with all people with whom I have the pleasure to work together, it seems to work out just fine.
Jeez, this is almost an evangelical post. But I just had to share it with you: I am so truly right where I want to be with all the balls up in the air. I really hope that we can keep it up for years to come this way. With everything growing in its own right direction.
Maybe this simply is a premature Christmas-thank-you feeling I realised when riding home on my bike. Maybe. Maybe not. What the heck. The beauty of happiness is that you multiply it when you share it right? So here's my two cents worth!
At the start of this year I was in doubt as to what I wanted to do. I seriously thought and even acted upon an urge to find colleagues and a steady job. Mainly because of personal development reasons. I had a couple of chats and made a U-turn back to being self employed. Wholeheartedly. As that is the form that seems to allow me to follow the paths that feel right to me even though they do not seem to make any sense to the outside world. And come to think of it: usually they don't make any sense to me:-) I just tend to take a road that opens itself as it feels right. Of course I make plenty of mistakes, but hey: I get to apologise and mend them as well.
That U-turn back to self employment for now seems to be the true path. Really. And that is what I so much want to share. EthicsEnterprise has brought me the colleague I longed for and the opportunity to explore and expand my background in ethics. Discovering new roads. Finding our way in voicing our very own Ethics Enterprise sound. Which is a wonderful road of personal development as well as a development in partnership. MK5060 is well and truly reopened. I cannot express enough thanks to those who helped me to do so: science centers, library organisations....well: you know who you are. I thank you from the bottom of my heart. How cool (or rather: WARM) is it when you decide to re-open and people call you with the message that they would like to help you get back on your feet. When people continue to do so. Offering warm surrounding to work with truly wonderful people.
Yes, a pause here. Because that is what happened. I am in awe.
Picnic in the park is my (and our, as in my and my husbands) most recent undertaking. For now we're seriously but simply exploring where that road will lead us. Letting it grow organically, planning ahead a bit but not to much and mainly being focussed on maintaining the quality of our products. With step by step professionalisation. Focussing on our dreams of connecting preservering recipes through the ages and throught cultures.
Believe me: for the life of me at the start of 2011 I had not dared to dream that this year would turn out this way. Is it bussy? Heck, yes. And sure, it has it's ups and downs. Time is short with so many things needing attention. When the pressure gets on I can become truly very Dutch, very straight. At times loosing the precious balance between quality, time and cost. But somehow with all people with whom I have the pleasure to work together, it seems to work out just fine.
Jeez, this is almost an evangelical post. But I just had to share it with you: I am so truly right where I want to be with all the balls up in the air. I really hope that we can keep it up for years to come this way. With everything growing in its own right direction.
Maybe this simply is a premature Christmas-thank-you feeling I realised when riding home on my bike. Maybe. Maybe not. What the heck. The beauty of happiness is that you multiply it when you share it right? So here's my two cents worth!
dinsdag 9 augustus 2011
Jan Lee Martin Futures Foundation RIP
Via the mailing list of the World Futures Studies Foundation I just received the sad news that Jan Lee Martin in Sydney, Australia has passed on, apparantly peacefully in her sleep. We had the pleasure of meeting her in Sydney a good ten years ago now.
In 1999 we moved to New Zealand, not knowing wether it would be for a bit, a bit longer or possibly forever. But knowing for very sure that it was one country we wanted to know, to experience, to smell, to breathe. We wanted to live and work there and just ride the waves of life down under. Having graduated for my MA with a studies on the future of digital services to consumers, I thought futures studies would be a good angle to get to know people. And hence I searched and found New Zealand Futures Trust (now: Futures Thinking Aotearoa) and one evening taking the time difference into account I called the Futures Trust office and got of to a brilliant, warm start with Yvon Curtis whom today we are honoured and proud to call a dear friend. Actually more than that: she feels like family. Back then after a great time together we decided to move on the Australia. Whilst being down under, why not explore the lot? We were free, no strings attached and as hungry as we are now to explore and discover. So Yvon referred us to Jan Lee, saying that we absolutely had to meet her as she was a driving force behind the Australian Futures world.
We moved to Sydney, lived nine lives at once with our jobs in CBD and for the Dutch Olympic Team and indeed met up with Jan Lee. One inspiring woman! She was warm, hospitable, receiving us in her house, sharing stories about her travels to Europe and we discovered that we above all shared a deep and almost limitless hunger for Big Questions and integration of fields. But also her story of selling her business without actually retiring inspired me. As I remember her it was a woman driven by passion and a good hunger for development, one of those truly ageless wise people who just kept working. Tirelessly and with a sense of humor.
It was a meeting of "one night only" but it was a night to remember. A talk that still inspires. Thanks Jan Lee.
In 1999 we moved to New Zealand, not knowing wether it would be for a bit, a bit longer or possibly forever. But knowing for very sure that it was one country we wanted to know, to experience, to smell, to breathe. We wanted to live and work there and just ride the waves of life down under. Having graduated for my MA with a studies on the future of digital services to consumers, I thought futures studies would be a good angle to get to know people. And hence I searched and found New Zealand Futures Trust (now: Futures Thinking Aotearoa) and one evening taking the time difference into account I called the Futures Trust office and got of to a brilliant, warm start with Yvon Curtis whom today we are honoured and proud to call a dear friend. Actually more than that: she feels like family. Back then after a great time together we decided to move on the Australia. Whilst being down under, why not explore the lot? We were free, no strings attached and as hungry as we are now to explore and discover. So Yvon referred us to Jan Lee, saying that we absolutely had to meet her as she was a driving force behind the Australian Futures world.
We moved to Sydney, lived nine lives at once with our jobs in CBD and for the Dutch Olympic Team and indeed met up with Jan Lee. One inspiring woman! She was warm, hospitable, receiving us in her house, sharing stories about her travels to Europe and we discovered that we above all shared a deep and almost limitless hunger for Big Questions and integration of fields. But also her story of selling her business without actually retiring inspired me. As I remember her it was a woman driven by passion and a good hunger for development, one of those truly ageless wise people who just kept working. Tirelessly and with a sense of humor.
It was a meeting of "one night only" but it was a night to remember. A talk that still inspires. Thanks Jan Lee.
maandag 6 juni 2011
FIRST LEGO League Open European Championships: the view from the judging room
![]() |
Greetings from all teams in the Chinese and Taiwanese tradition |
Friday and Satury Delft was the host of the FLL OEC 2011. An incredible event for many reasons. I was lucky enough to participate as a judge on one of the project presentation judging teams. The view from the judging room is a special one. Teams coming in singing. Offering you their trembling and somewhat sweaty hand. Your hand being equally fuelled with tension. Because you never know what will come, only for sure that it will surprise you. The teams launch into presentation on topics you've hardly heard off or thought about. Epilepsy, stem cells, mini robots that are injected into the bloodstream to destroy blood cloths, minimally invasive methods to beat cancer....But also topics closer by to the kids: the flat feet of the Happy Feet team from India, the incredibly well thought through device of the Brasilien SESI team that allows people to exercise under medical supervision in the free exercise grounds in Brasil, the team from Peru who had developed a pregnancy monitoring device using a simple mobile phone thus enabling women high up in the Andes as well as women living in the city to get the benefits of telemedicine. I cannot even recall what we got in front of our judging tables, from China to Australia, from the USA to Singapore and everything in between. Backed up by fans, families and friends that had trailed along from all over the world.
What makes it especially incredible is that through science and technology cultural, language and political borders are surpassed. Or better: are debunked. They simply do not count any longer. Friendships are formed across language barriers. Inventions are admired across political sensivities. It's magical. The stuff happy times and good memories are made of.
![]() |
greetings from all teams! |
Being a judge on such an event is really tough. Because basically you are asked to judge varieties of greatness, varieties of ingenuity, of learning experiences and varieties of great fun. Entities that do not quite fit boxes on the form: good, average, room for improvement or excellent. A number of times I felt like a proper historical artefact. For example when a 13 year old blankly tells you that the app they programmed is in the android app store but that the performance will be greatly enhanced with the new android platform that will come out this summer. Or when a database of 1500 types of food is presented to you, all indexed to enhance the life of diabetic patients. Or when three girls are measuring brain waves to explain how you can see an epileptic attack coming on.
I had many moment where I felt utterly awed by the body of knowledge that was researched but above all by the passion by which is was researched and presented. Sometimes so strongly that I could litterally feel the air vibrating by the enthusiasm of the team. Anybody who truly believes that wisdom comes with the ages I invite to come to one of these happenings, and have yourself proven otherwise: cynicism comes with the ages. And at times pure stupidity, when you see what is produced here. The question I am left with: when does cynicism kick in? Why can't we keep the spirits of unity and brotherhood across borders up when we grow older? What precisly is so hard about trusting and appreciating the other? How is it that what sets us apart at some point in life becomes the focus of attention rather then what unites us? While we all grow tender when we see kids uniting across borders? An amazing dichotomy that has me seriously puzzled whilst looking back on a marvellous weekend.
Thanks to all the organisers, teams and volunteers involved: we had a blast!
For live images see the MK5060 YouTube channel. And below some photo impressions.
Also see the blog of official FIRST LEGO League correspondent Khaled Marashdeh.
![]() |
Saudi Arabian style! |
![]() |
Happy feet won a prize |
![]() |
never too old to train your cuddly dragon |
![]() |
Member of the Thai team |
![]() |
Asklepios from Turkey |
![]() |
Brasil |
![]() |
Woody collects signatures |
dinsdag 24 mei 2011
Under pressure
"Under pressure everything becomes fluid" is a famous Dutch saying, which I hereby undoubtedly translated completely wrongly in English :-) It is something we say when the pressure is so high that the timeline determines everything and that you just work-work-work to get the job done. In practice pretty much without thinking.
With every project I manage and conference I design I am becoming increasingly convinced that quite a few people actually consciously let the pressure build to such an extent that they feel they can let the process take over their decision capability. Which is convenient. Because if you can point a finger to the deadline and the incredible pressure you were under to actually reach this deadline, the finger of responsibility does not point to you. In other words: people put their own responsibility on the shoulders of the rather anonymous process. Because if you take responsibility, if you make conscious decisions, you can decide wrongly. And you are responsible.
I have to admit that this development worries me. Is it the recession that makes people insecure about keeping their jobs and thus fuels an increasing responsibility avoidance in a rather sophisticated way? Is it over all insecurity about what is good? Something else? Whatever the cause, I am positively baffled by what people see as utterly unplannable. As far as I'm concerned it's all about finding the right balance. The right balance between planning and seizing opportunity, between planning and allowing for inspiration. It's the same when chairing a group session. I am becoming increasinly allergic to the adagium of some professional chairs who eagerly state: "well, it hall has to come from the group you know". Right, if so, then why on earth do we need a chair?
Sure, we are only humans and being a philosopher and an ethicist I am actuly aware of our vulnerability. As an experienced project manager I am fully aware of the role of coincidences and events that were unplanned. But when it comes to preparation I side with those who say that success is where preparation meets opportunity. Without the preparation the opportunity will not come neither be ceased. Now tell me, have I accidently exchanged my bright pink sun glasses for looking at the world by a pair of ink black ones? Or is there some rhyme and reason to my muttering?
With every project I manage and conference I design I am becoming increasingly convinced that quite a few people actually consciously let the pressure build to such an extent that they feel they can let the process take over their decision capability. Which is convenient. Because if you can point a finger to the deadline and the incredible pressure you were under to actually reach this deadline, the finger of responsibility does not point to you. In other words: people put their own responsibility on the shoulders of the rather anonymous process. Because if you take responsibility, if you make conscious decisions, you can decide wrongly. And you are responsible.
I have to admit that this development worries me. Is it the recession that makes people insecure about keeping their jobs and thus fuels an increasing responsibility avoidance in a rather sophisticated way? Is it over all insecurity about what is good? Something else? Whatever the cause, I am positively baffled by what people see as utterly unplannable. As far as I'm concerned it's all about finding the right balance. The right balance between planning and seizing opportunity, between planning and allowing for inspiration. It's the same when chairing a group session. I am becoming increasinly allergic to the adagium of some professional chairs who eagerly state: "well, it hall has to come from the group you know". Right, if so, then why on earth do we need a chair?
Sure, we are only humans and being a philosopher and an ethicist I am actuly aware of our vulnerability. As an experienced project manager I am fully aware of the role of coincidences and events that were unplanned. But when it comes to preparation I side with those who say that success is where preparation meets opportunity. Without the preparation the opportunity will not come neither be ceased. Now tell me, have I accidently exchanged my bright pink sun glasses for looking at the world by a pair of ink black ones? Or is there some rhyme and reason to my muttering?
woensdag 11 mei 2011
From communication to participation
![]() |
http://asymptotia.com/category/energy/ |
But why do we always somewhere along the lines get caught in the tranmission model when it comes to science communication, I wonder? Are we right there where society is? I wonder but I am inclined to say that we are not. I have a nagging idea that we could well be underestimating our audience. I think that we all pretty much understand that we are no longer outside a shop window (to use one of yesterdays analogies) looking at the science and technology on display, trying to figure out what suits us best. Rather we are in the midst of that shop. We are in it and of it. These are philosophical terms, whether everybody will use those same words to phrase our position: probably not. But that does not mean that it is not understood, I'd say. It does however mean that we really need to reframe our way of work and our way of thinking, talking and acting vis-a-vis science communication.
And that is exactly what I like about Naturalis - and by the way also about the Science Centre Delft, which is aiming for true interaction between the science community and the visitors as well (had some great pictures, but unfortunately iPhone is broken...). Because these institutions are going in full gear towards a participatory model of science education. In which the visitor is both part of the experience and creates his or her own experiences. In fact: in which the visitor helps to shape the institutions. Actively. By deeds, thoughts and actions. This is the fundamental shift I was talking about in my last blog. It's no longer a defined vision of what science is or what a museum is that is thought through and then shaped and communicated. What is presented is rather: this is the work that we do here, help us, experience, participate. An open invitation to visitors to make up their own minds. To shape their own experiences and follow their own interests by asking questions, participating in indexing the collection (in the case of Naturalis) and through their own interests and participation shape their view of science.
It is I feel a much needed turn. Because to keep on fine tuning the message, the relation between the message and the audience, to change the sender...it's all variations on the same theme that I feel do no longer fit the current day and age in which participation is key. Sure, it's about channels, messages and audiences. But channels, messages and audiences are more and more becoming one. The medium is the message, the audience is the sender and the sender is receiver and the medium and vice versa. The question is how to participate in that changing and evolving field. And that is I'd say through fundamentally changing our own mindset and way of work towards a participatory way of working. In which we do not control or even have the directors role. But in which we just present ourselves, as we are, doing the work that we do. And by extending an open invitatin to others to work with us, to experience with us, to get a sense of what has at some stage ignited our passion.
My, it was food for thought hey, yesterday! Anybody ready to help develop this line of thought? Preferably at some stage into a line of action:-)?Because I'm thinking, searching, trying as well here, feeling I'm onto something, but maybe not yet able to write it down correctly.
Abonneren op:
Posts (Atom)