|
Sh_ _ Happens -
The Sequel
In our last
e-newsletter we looked at the above phrase
through the lens of two types of causality,
formative and rational. We often try very hard
to manage our organizations assuming it operates
by formative causality when in fact it often
operates by rational causality and thus, sh_ _
happens. In this e-newsletter we take a look at
another type of causality, transformative, a
causality that often doesn’t get much air time.
This is because it describes a way in which
unplanned things can happen or perhaps better
described as, sh_ _ might happen….
When you
really look at how things happen in
organizations; when you keep asking
“so how did that happen?”, or “what do we need
to do to make this happen?” you eventually end
up with a basic and very real answer. People
interacting make things happen. This
interaction may be individual, through
reflection or together through conversation.
These interactions produce more interactions and
things get done, things change. It is in this
all so common occurrence of interaction that
transformative causality is found.
Transformation, newness, innovation, the
unplanned happens when people interact.
Transformative causality is the cause of the
unknown and unplanned. When people interact
they bring their entire history of experience
plus their hopes and images of the future to
bear on that interaction. When these get
combined with the vast perspectives and
experiences of others it is impossible to
predict specifically what might come forward.
Maybe something perfectly predictable or maybe
something perfectly unpredictable. If it’s the
latter you have transformative causality at work
and sh_ _ might happen, you just don’t really
know.
Transformative causality needs interaction in
order to operate and typically this interaction
is in the form of conversations. It is the
conversations we have with people that create
the unplanned in our organizational worlds. It
seems almost unbelievable that we have come to
think we can plan, predict, control and manage
our organizations when the very currency that
makes organizations come alive - our
conversations - carries the possibility of
throwing it all into various levels of the
unknown. The paradox of this is that although
we have come to think, or expect, and have been
trained to believe we can plan, predict, and
control our organizations, it is not what we
do. Ask anyone in an organization to tell you
their organizational stories and they will tell
you they act into the unknown all the time, and
they survive it quite well.
The reason
this is important is that we continue to think
and learn about our organizations in one way and
then experience it in another, and we devalue
our experience in order to eliminate this
paradox. Simply look at the vast majority of
management training and management thinking
today. Really look at it. Go root out your
last course on managing change or managing
conflict or managing just about anything. At
the heart of it is formative causality. No
matter how participative it purports to be, you
will find the assumption that you can manage
these situations by doing something to someone
and that that someone really doesn’t have a role
to play in the whole thing. Nowhere will you
find in those courses the statement that says,
when you interact with your employees around
change, or conflict that something totally
unpredictable might happen, something you could
never have planned for. Something that
recognizes that when people interact, everyone
has a role to play for no other reason than they
are interacting.
Transformative causality gives a legitimate
explanation to our day to day experiences in
organizations. It legitimizes things like
agendas going off track and something of value
still happening. It legitimizes sitting down
with people and talking and just finding out
what happens. It legitimizes our wonderful
capacity to act into the unknown and just get on
together. And finally, it legitimizes that all
those training manuals you’ve had on your shelf
for years and haven’t looked at since the
course, should sit there longer still.
Our challenge is to work with transformative
causality in the formal aspects of our
business. Things like planning, change, project
management and so on. This will be the focus of
our very first cohort initiative with our new
subscription process. Connect back if you are
interested. |