Danny Burlage Profile picture
Jan 7 20 tweets 6 min read Read on X
In 1973, a Dutch tech pioneer did something radical:

He split his company into tiny, independent units.

No hierarchy. Just small teams with total autonomy.

By 1996, his company had 10,000 employees across 20 countries.

What Eckart Wintzen would say about today's workplace: Image
Most people have never heard of BSO/Origin.

But this forgotten company pioneered a revolutionary management style that tech giants are scrambling to replicate today.

The secret? Cellular division.

Just like biology, but for business... Image
When a BSO unit reached a certain size, Wintzen would split it into two.

Each new "cell" operated independently, with its own:

• P&L responsibility
• Hiring decisions
• Client relationships
• Strategic direction

The results were extraordinary: Image
Traditional companies struggled with bureaucracy and slow decision-making.

But BSO's cells moved fast and adapted quickly.

Think of it like a living organism: When one cell faced trouble, it didn't bring down the whole system.

Other cells could step in and help.

But here's where it gets interesting:
Each cell had complete freedom to:
• Choose their projects
• Set their prices
• Hire their team
• Define their strategy

The only rule? Stay profitable and maintain quality.

This level of autonomy was unheard of in the 70s. Image
The magic happened when cells collaborated:

They formed natural partnerships based on shared goals.

No forced cooperation.
No corporate mandates.
Just organic growth.

This created an ecosystem of innovation.
Wintzen's radical idea wasn't just about structure.

It was about trust.

He believed that when you trust people completely, they rise to the occasion.

No lengthy approval processes. No micromanagement.

Just pure accountability to their team and clients.
The results spoke for themselves:

• Rapid international expansion
• High employee satisfaction
• Incredible innovation rate
• Strong client relationships

All without traditional management layers.

But there's more to this story:
Fast forward to 2024.

Companies are desperately trying to become more agile and adaptable.

They're experimenting with:
• Flat hierarchies
• Remote teams
• Autonomous units

Sound familiar? Wintzen was 50 years ahead of his time.
Modern companies face the same challenges BSO solved:

• How to scale without bureaucracy
• How to maintain innovation as you grow
• How to keep teams aligned without control
• How to preserve culture across locations

The answers lie in Wintzen's model.
But here's what would fascinate Wintzen today:

The rise of AI is making his cellular model even more powerful.

How?

Because AI can handle the coordination that used to require layers of middle management.

Let me explain:
In Wintzen's day, keeping cells aligned was challenging.

Teams had to manually share information and coordinate decisions.

Today, AI can:
• Analyze patterns across units
• Flag potential issues
• Suggest collaborations
• Automate reporting

The technology is catching up to his vision.
Think about modern collaboration tools:

They're essentially creating digital cells.

Teams can now:
• Self-organize around projects
• Share knowledge instantly
• Coordinate globally
• Measure their own performance

Just like Wintzen envisioned.
The modern workplace is becoming a living digital organism:

• Teams form and dissolve naturally
• Information flows freely
• AI handles coordination
• Humans focus on creativity

This is Wintzen's dream amplified by technology. Image
Here's what fascinates me most about Wintzen's model today:

AI isn't replacing his principles.

It's making them more powerful than ever.

But only if you implement it correctly.
Most organizations get this backwards:

They use AI to control rather than empower.

The result?
• Decreased innovation
• Lower employee satisfaction
• Missed opportunities

There's a better way:
After helping hundreds of Dutch organizations modernize their workplace, we've learned:

The key is using technology to amplify human potential, not restrict it.

This is where Microsoft Copilot becomes transformative.

But only with the right foundation.
Want to learn how to implement AI that actually empowers your people?

I share weekly insights on:
• Modern workplace evolution
• AI implementation
• Digital transformation

Follow me @dannyburlage for more.
I hope you've found this thread helpful.

Follow me @DannyBurlage for more.

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More from @DannyBurlage

Feb 13
The Dutch have a secret weapon:

One man built 6 million-dollar companies. Alone. No employees. No investors.

His method shocked Silicon Valley. Anyone can copy it.

Here's the counterintuitive rule he followed to build an empire alone: Image
Meet Pieter Levels.

His story embodies everything about Dutch innovation and entrepreneurship.

Working alone, he's launched multiple successful projects that serve global audiences.

But his approach revealed something extraordinary about modern business...
Traditional startup wisdom says you need:

• Massive venture funding
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But Levels discovered a powerful alternative that would transform everything...
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Feb 7
Elon Musk's secret weapon is a 19-year-old dropout:

He left college to join Neuralink in 2024.

Now he's the youngest expert at DOGE.

Here's what a teenager wants to do with America's most sensitive data: Image
Meet Edward Coristine, a 19-year-old Northeastern University freshman.

He's majoring in mechanical engineering and physics.

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Like Zuckerberg and Gates, he wanted to build his own tech empire.

But his path took an unexpected turn that's raising serious alarms...Image
At 16, he founded LLC.

This company controlled multiple web domains - including some registered in Russia.

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Their specialty? Hiring reformed hackers.

And that's just the beginning of the concerns: Tesla.Sexy
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Feb 4
These two teenagers became Pentagon proteges.

By 17, they were so good at hacking, their ISPs sent warning letters.

Today, they've paid out $230M to ethical hackers worldwide.

Here's how two Dutch kids revolutionized cybersecurity forever: Image
It started in a garage filled with broken electronics.

Two 6-year-old boys, Jobert Abma and Michiel Prins, were fascinated by how things worked.

Their first project? Taking apart walkie-talkies to understand wireless communication.

But that was just the beginning...
At age 11, everything changed.

Michiel's nephew gave them a CD containing Visual Basic.

Determined to learn coding, they borrowed a 600-page Visual Basic manual from the library where Michiel's mother worked.

What happened next left their parents stunned: Image
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Jan 23
Your entire digital life exists because of one crazy meeting.

In 1998, an unknown Dutch engineer named Cees Links walked into Apple...

...and convinced Steve Jobs to bet everything on an impossible dream.

The price was laughable. The technology didn't exist.

Here's how one forgotten meeting created WiFi:Image
Image
The stakes were high.

Apple needed something innovative for their upcoming iBook laptop.

In 1998, when Cees Links and his team from Lucent Technologies arrived at Apple HQ, they had no idea what to expect.

But what happened in that room would change technology forever:
Steve Jobs was late to his own meeting.

When he finally walked in, he didn't even introduce himself.

The room was filled with about a dozen executives from both companies, including Lucent's CEO Rich McGinn.

What happened next would reshape how we connect forever:
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Jan 17
Most families lose their wealth by the third generation.

But this Dutch immigrant's legacy grew from a small newspaper...

into one of America's largest conglomerates...

This is the Koch's secret formula for building (and keeping) generational wealth: Image
The story begins in 1867 with Harry Koch, a printer's apprentice in The Hague and Germany.

In 1888, he made the bold decision to cross the Atlantic, arriving with little more than his printing skills and determination.

But something unexpected was about to happen...
He settled in a small Texas town called Quanah.

In 1897, he spotted an opportunity that would change his family's destiny:

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But this wasn't just any small-town newspaper... Image
Read 18 tweets
Jan 16
In 1640, a Dutch teenager stepped off a boat in New Amsterdam.

He couldn't even afford his own ticket.

227 years later, his family would control America's largest railroad empire.

The incredible story of how the Vanderbilts built (and lost) their fortune: Image
In 1640, a Jan Aertszoon, of De Bilt, arrived in New Amsterdam as an indentured servant.

He was forced to work 3 YEARS just to pay off his boat ticket.

That teen would become the patriarch of America's wealthiest dynasty...

The Vanderbilts.
After completing his servitude, Jan settled in New Amsterdam.

He moved to Flatbush, Long Island, married three times, and slowly built a life for himself.

By 1694, he owned land in Bergen, New Jersey.

But the real Vanderbilt story was just beginning to unfold:
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