Oh no we’re not …

August 28, 2015

In my last post I asked the question Are we doomed to chaos? I planned to answer the question with a yes but yesterday but I ended up packing the day with a workshop helping people to find ways of avoiding such doom in terms with a client in South Africa, followed by a dash to the airport and two long economy flights to the UK. As it happened that delay worked well as the perfect Gaping Void cartoon for the post came in today and I also had some reflective time on the plane without the room to use the macbook to catch up on email!

Now this builds on my earlier posts on the nature of dynamics in Cynefin, in particular the one on triggering attention. In effect the forest cycle assumes that the organisation will become increasingly focused on efficiency to the point where it cannot survive shock. Now I think that is pretty much the default position and I can see whey people are attracted to the theory. However it can also be worrying fatalistic. One theory going the rounds in South Africa for example is that the country needs to go through a catastrophic failure before anything good can arise. Now that maybe, but the human cost is too high and if we understand the nature of the interactions then there are other options available to us.

In effect when we reach Trigger Point 2 (a ideally, b otherwise) we have to make a decision. Do we want to allow the increasing optimisation to continue in which case the overall ecology will become very stable? Or to put it another way, the product will be increasingly commoditised or the organisation will become increasingly bureaucratic. If we do then we need to be prepared to abandon it when the market shifts or a major threat comes into play. In Boston Matrix terms kill the Cash Cow when it starts to become a dog. That is a legitimate business strategy, but it is not universal (one problem with Anarchy) and in the case of society it is not desirable.

The solutions then (using a mixture of Cynefin Dynamics and the Forest Cycle) involve changing the nature of type of interactions. We can summarise them as follows:

  1. Increase the inefficiency of the system by allowing greater variation of agency and interaction through safe-to-fail experiments around variations in product or service.  In effect return the product or service to the complex domain.
  2. Introduce micro catastrophes or disruptions into the systems.  A shallow dive into chaos in Cynefin terms.   Taking away constraints, allowing novel new combinations to become visible to decision makers.
  3. More radically change the eco-system in play by extended decision making into the supplier and/or customer systems.   In a series of discussions in South Africa I was looking at a situation where a community is dependent on a single manufacturing industry, but relationships between management and workers have become entrained and antagonistic to the point of extreme violence.  We started to look at extended the management structure of the factory, and its responsibilities, into the wider community.  Increasingly the visibility of a co-dependency that is not acknowledged by increasing the level of co-evolution and inter-dependency.

Now that is not a full list, but it illustrates the way to go around solving problems from a complexity perspective. You could try and find a recipe from a popular management book, or get everyone together in a Kumbayah session imposing your pop psychology onto ordinary people while rambling on about de-humanisation, being and becoming and the like. All very satisfying for the facilitator but any positive effect is temporary at best. You don’t get far by tacking a complex problem directly. Instead you look at the evolutionary process that will lead to lock in and intervene to change species diversity, external stimulation etc. Multiple such attempts open up possibilities that could now have been known in advance.

I’ll develop this tomorrow in the typology of change initiatives I promised earlier on in my metamorphosis series.

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