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Sh_ _ Happens - But
What Causes It?
The first two words above have entered into
popular language, especially organizational
language within the past generation or so to
describe that wide range of unpleasant and
unplanned occurrences that we would just rather
not have happen to us. This graphic verbal
pairing also legitimizes the very unpredictable
nature of much of our experience. This pairing
also encourages us to ‘get on with things’ since
this is the way lots of things happen and we
shouldn’t overly concern ourselves with why
these things happen. And most of us do just
‘get on with things’. Interestingly, when we
do ‘get on with things’ we often do it by
thinking we should be able to do things so sh_ _
never happens.
When you look at what assumptions many of the
managerial behaviors in organizations are based
on you will find one assumption really stands
out:
Management should be
able to design organizational systems that will
result in
predictable outcomes.
Budgeting, planning, performance management,
even compensation systems stand solidly on this
assumption. So when sh_ _ happens it must mean
that either management isn’t doing their job
very well or this assumption may be flawed. It
tends to be easier to blame management than
re-think assumptions which are mostly unseen
anyway.
The dominant thinking about how things happen in
organizations can be looked at through the lens
of causality and two types of causality
legitimize the above assumption:
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Formative causality -
Basically this means things happen by
design; the end point is enfolded in, or
caused by the design of something. For
instance the end point of an oak tree is
enfolded into the acorn and when planted the
acorn will produce an oak tree, nothing
else.
-
Rational causality - This
applies primarily to humans, in that we can
make conscious choices about what we will do
that are not necessarily aligned with any
design of what we should do or what might be
predicted. We are the cause of our end
points due to rational choice.
The assumption above is based on rational
causality. Management will make choices on how
to design their organization and if done well
the rest of the organization should operate from
the first type of causality, formative, and
unfold as predicted in the design. It feels
good and competent to believe an organization
runs this way. The problem is the rest of the
organization is populated by humans just like
management so they operate from the foundation
of rational causality too, not formative
causality. They make their own choices about how
to respond and thus, sh_ _ happens.
The so what of this is that our typical response
is to try and plan better, budget better, manage
performance better etc. still using the same
thinking that caused us problems in the first
place. This is a downward spiral to higher
stress and tension, more work, more blame, more
second guessing and not much more improvement.
The challenge is to bring the reality that sh_ _
happens into our assumptions about how things
happen and let it affect the way we budget,
plan, manage performance etc. This is not easy
because we now have to admit things will happen
that we cannot predict and this is not at all
comfortable. What would the assumption above
look like if we incorporated the reality that sh_
_ happens:
Management should be able to designs
organizational systems
interactions that
will
hopefully result
in management’s
intentions becoming a reality, and this will not
be known
until those interactions take place
predictable outcomes.
So maybe it is a bit scary to base our behavior
on this assumption but is it not what management
really does? And when sh_ _ happens we can
spend less time trying to manage it out of
existence and get on with things in ways that
acknowledges this actually is part of what
happens.
Over the course of the next year we are going to
be investigating some of these core questions of
organizational life as part of our subscription
initiative. We will be planning conference
calls, writing and publishing articles, and
exchanging ideas with other subscribed Network
Members to move our thinking forward to help
improve organizational life at its very roots;
the way we think about it.
Stay tuned……
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