s trategisk l edelse 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

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STRATEGISK LEDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

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Page 1: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

STRATEGISK LEDELSE7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

Page 2: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

LECTURES, AUTUMN 2012Wee

kDate Subject Literature

35 27. Aug

SM in Perspective Stacey #1

36 3. Sep Strategy and organizational change Stacey #2

37 10. Sep The origins of systems thinking Stacey #3

38 17. Sep Forming and starting mini project groups N/A

39 24. Sep Cybernetic systems, Cognitivist and humanistic psychology

Stacey #4

40 1. Oct Cancelled

41 8. Oct Organizational learning and knowledge creation Stacey #5

42 15. Oct Autumn Holiday

43 22. Oct Complexity sciences + The interplay of intentions Stacey #12

44 29. Oct Complex responsive processes of conversation Stacey #13

45 5. Nov

Interaction of strategising and patterns of strategyStacey #14

46 12. Nov Complex responsive processes of ideology and power relating

Stacey #15

47 19. Nov Modes of articulating patterns of interaction Stacey #16

48 26. Nov Complex Responsive Processes of strategising Stacey #17

49 3. Dec Complex Responsive Processes Stacey #18

50 10. Dec TBA

2 7. Jan Q&A Session

3 14. Jan Exam

Page 3: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

THE COMPLEXITY SCIENCES All ideas in section 1 (chapter 1-9) is imported

from natural sciences and complexity theories could present significant challenges to this way of thinking

The complexity sciences will establish the transition from section 1 to section 3 of the textbook

Strategic ChoiceTheory

TransitionComplexResponsiveProcesses

Page 4: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

CHAOS THEORY Chaos theory is not to be regarded as utter

confusion! It is an extension of systems dynamics and focuses

on the phenomenon is changing over time The model is iterated over time, which means that

calculated output of one period is taken as input for the next calculation and identifies dynamical properties

In system dynamics, a model can, at one point, display an equilibrium. In chaos theory, the ‘Point Attractor’ settles for such an equilibrium.

At other points, the model displays perfectly stable and predictable cycles of movement which is referred to as ‘Cyclical’ or ‘Period two, attractor’

Page 5: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

CHAOS THEORY The highly unstable behavior, for certain parameter

values, of system dynamics is referred to as ‘high-dimensional chaos’ – a pattern of fragmentation

Between stable parameter values (point or cyclical) and unstable values (chaos) the system moves in a manner that seems random, but displays a pattern

The pattern is regular irregularity or stable instability which means it is predictably unpredictable

Paradoxical pattern of movement; Strange attractor, which is referred to as Mathematical Chaos and is a completely differently dynamic where stability and instability is inextricably intertwined

Page 6: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

CHAOS THEORY High sensitivity to initial conditions and even tiny

differences in the input of one period can escalate so that patterns change qualitatively in later periods

Long-term predictions is therefore impossible! Weather systems actually follows a Strange

Attractor and can be visualized as the ‘Butterfly Effect’

Short-term predictions are possible, because it takes time for tiny differences to escalate

Impossible to identify specific causes the produces specific outcomes, but boundaries and the nature of the patterns are known

Page 7: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

CHAOS THEORY Chaos theories do not have the internal capacity

to move spontaneously moves from attractor to another, this requires an external force for parameter change

Causality continues to be formative and chaos models are unfolding the pattern already enfolded in its mathematical specification

Incapable of spontaneously generating novelty

Page 8: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

DISSIPATIVE STRUCTURES Based on demonstrations that shows how

physical and chemical systems displays unpredictable forms of behavior when far from equilibrium

Systems may reach critical points where they self-organize to produce a different structure or behavior that cannot be predicted from knowledge of the previous state

This more complex structure is called Dissipative Structures because it takes energy to sustain that new mode

Page 9: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

DISSIPATIVE STRUCTURES Example with thermodynamics

• Closed to environment and temperature uniform• At a state of rest on global level (no bulk

movements)• Movements of molecules are random and

independent• System behavior is symmetrical, uniform and

regular• When heat is applied, the liquid is pushed for from its equilibrium and small fluctuations are amplified throughout the liquid

• Temperature change at the base is amplified or spread through the liquid. Molecules start to move upward

• Established convection so molecules least affected are displaced and moved down to the base

• The molecules are now moving in a circle• At a certain temperature point, the molecules start

setting up hexagonal cells and turning both ways• The cells are self-organizing in a non-predictable

way!

Page 10: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

DISSIPATIVE STRUCTURES When the water boils, a state of deterministic chaos In nature, as opposed to laboratory experiments,

parameters are changed by nature itself. Self-organization is a process that occurs

spontaneously at certain critical system values Such spontaneously moves to different attractors,

only emerges when impacted from the environment The dissipative structure dissolves easily if the

system moves away from critical parameter values

Equlibirum structure:- No effort to retain structure- Great effort to change structure

Dissipative structure:- Great effort to retain structure- Little effort to change structure

Page 11: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

DISSIPATIVE STRUCTURES A wider implication of these identifications could

be whether the future is given, or is it under perpetual construction?

Prigogine: Nature is about the creation of unpredictable novelty, where the possible is richer than the real

Life is a unstable system with an unknowable future in which the irreversibility of time plays a constitutive role

In the case of organizations, then decision making

Page 12: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

DISSIPATIVE STRUCTURES If these theories were to be applied to an

organization, then decision making processes that involved; Forecasting Envisioning future states Making key assumptions about future states

.. would be problematic in terms of realizing a chosen future. Those applying such processes in conditions of stable instability would be engaging in fantasy activities

No one can establish how the system would move before a policy change and how it would move after the policy change. There would be no option, but to make the change and see what happens

Page 13: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS CAS is characterized by a large number of agents,

each of which behaving to some set of rules. These rules requires each agent to adjust its action

to that of other agents and hence forming a system which also could be thought of as a population-wide pattern

Examples of Complex Adaptive Systems; Bird flocking, where individual agents who might be

following simple rules to do with adaption to the movement of neighbours so as to fly in formation without colliding

The human body, consisting of 30000 individual genes interacting with each other to produce human physiology

An ecology with a number of species relating to each other to produce patterns of evolving life forms

Page 14: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS Complexity sciences seeks to identify common

features of the dynamics of the example systems in general and how do such complex non-linear systems function to produce orderly patterns across a population?

The expectation, when using traditionally sciences, when studying such phenomena's would be to identify laws governing evolution or blue-prints for the system

Scientists working with CAS take a fundamentally different approach, they model individual agent interaction with each agent behaving to its own local principles of interacion

Page 15: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS This leads to the principle of self-organization,

agents interacts locally according to their own principles in the absence of an overall blueprint for the system they form

Self-organization and emergence can lead to fundamental structural development (novelty), not just superficial change

This is Spontaneous or Autonomous, arising from the intrinsic iterative nonlinear nature of the system

The inherent order in a CAS which evolves as the experience of the system, but no one can know what that evolutionary experience will be until it occurs

Page 16: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS Fitness Landscapes gives insight in evolutionary

process, just as animals develops strategies to feed and survive

To reach a peak means survival and to get trapped in a valley means extinction

The peaks cannot beseen from lower levels

Moving upwards through logicallyincremental strategymay fail due to missingcross-replication

Page 17: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

SUMMARY AND PERSPECTIVE

Introduction to; Chaos theory Dissipative structures Complex Adaptive Systems

A number of writers has been using these theories applied on organizations, however; System views of interaction retained Cognitivist approach to human psychology Prescription of the manager as the objective

observer Overall a re-representation of SCT

Page 18: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSES

Page 19: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSESINTRODUCTION When discussing organizations, fundamental

questions immediately arises, which have to do with what an organization is and how it is becoming what is becoming

In part one of the book (SCT), which is sees humans as independent, autonomous individuals acting rationally, is concerned with how an organization is becoming; Strategy as a process (desired outcomes)

SCT is based on the ideology of control which means that leaders and dominant coalitions choose the process and content of strategy for an organization in order to ensure acceptable performance

Page 20: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSESINTRODUCTION Part two explored more recent developments in

understanding dynamics of systems Complex systems displays the capacity to change

and produce new forms only when they operate in a paradoxical dynamic of stability and instability at the same time

Emergent forms is a result of self organization Important because these theories challenges the

most fundamental assumptions of SCT because harmony and consensus cannot be equated with success and unpredictability is fundamentally unavoidable

Micro diversity is essential for the emergence of new forms

Page 21: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSESINTRODUCTION The following part of the book (part 3) will explore

how we might interpret the radical insights of complexity sciences in terms of human action

Humans differ from the objects studied in part 2, because they are unique and, therefore, diverse persons who are conscious, self-conscious, emotional, rational, irrational, often spontaneous beings capable of some choice

The SCT standpoint, claiming that humans are independent, autonomous individuals is considered as fiction in part 3, because people are always fundamentally and inescapably interdependent

Page 22: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSESINTRODUCTION As a departure from previous sections, the term

Complex Responsive Processes of relating, refers the attention directly upon the responsive manner in which human persons interact with each other

A radical different view of dealing with the how, what the organization is becoming.

In the CRP perspective, process refers to the fundamental processes of human interaction – namely communicative interaction between interdependent persons taking the form of the conversation of gestures – and at the same time power relating

What happens to an organization emerges in the interplay of intentions between people

Page 23: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSESINTRODUCTION The essence of the Kantian thinking was presenting

a particular notion of process, systemic process, involving a particular notion of time (linear)

This view point is in its essence dualistic (both..and) which was a way to eliminate paradox

The how of strategy, the process, is then designing, shaping and influencing the system as a whole and its process.

The Content of strategy is thought of as the pattern of intended movement of the system and intended changes in the process over time by a regulator or controller standing outside them. Strategy here is about moving systems and designing process

Page 24: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

COMPLEX RESPONSIVE PROCESSESINTRODUCTION From a responsive process perspective, the how

of strategy is thought of as social processes of interaction between conscious and self-conscious persons in which their very identities emerge

The content of strategy is thought of as patterns of interaction : that is, as iterated identity

Strategy, here, is all about sustaining and changing identity: that is who we are and what we are doing together

Going forward it will be displayed how complexity sciences can be interpreted in human terms using social, responsive processes thinking; Hegel/Elias

Page 25: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKING

The thinking by the Romantic idealists were concerned with self-consciousness where the subject is an object to itself

It is the self that is real and all experience is carried back to this immediate experience of the self so that the reflexive position becomes central

Individual selves and social relations is understood to be intimately interconnected and experience is understood as historical, social processes of consciousness and self-consciousness

Page 26: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGHEGEL

Subject

Subject

Subject

Subject

Mind

Mind

Mind

Mind

Intra-su

bjective

behaviour

See

s an

obj

ect

Private Silent Conservations

• Conscious to others

• Acting roleplays as other subjects would act to self

• Building self-consciousness

Mirror

Hegel: Subjects sees each other as objects; reconfirming

Page 27: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGHEGEL In Hegels philosophy, the development of thought

takes place through conflict between persons and the world of our experience is the world we are creating in our thought

Subjects (and agents around) are interacting responsively and there are no separate realm outside experience.

The notions of person and subject are historically specific and are given content only by the social institutions in which each individual achieves social identity through interdependence and mutual recognition

Page 28: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGHEGEL Individuals are fundamentally social practioneers

and what they do, think or says takes form in the context of social practices, while these practices provide the required resources, objects of desire, skills and procedures

Paradoxical perspective in which individual minds are simultaneously forming and being formed by social relations -> Transformative causality

Page 29: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGHEGEL

Nature of movement

Cause of movement

Efficient cause Corrective repetition of past in order to realise an optimal future state

Universal, timeless laws of an ’if-then’ kind

Rationalist cause Towards rationality chosen goals for the future in order to realise a designed, desired state

Human reason

Formative cause Unfolding of enfolded mature form in order to realise that form in the future

Self-organising systemic process of unfolding in development stages

Transformative cause

Iterated interaction perpetually constructing the future in the present in order to express continuity and potential transformation in identity at the same time

Responsive processes of local interaction between entities in the present

Page 30: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGELIAS Elias did not think about the relationship between

the individual and society in terms of any spatial distinction between inside and outside.

Instead, he pointed to the essential interdependence of people and he understood both individual and social purely in Responsive Processes terms

Societies are always more or less incomplete, remaining open in time as a continuous flow

Page 31: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGELIAS Western civilisation is not the result of any

calculated long-term planning. Individual people did not form an intention to change civilisation and then gradually realise realise this intention through rational purposive measures

Social changes produced rational planning kinds of individuals, not the other way around

The development of a society was not caused by ‘mysterious’ social forces but is the consequence interweaving, the interplay of the intentions and actions of many, many people

Change of society occurs in an unplanned manner but nevertheless displayed a specific type of order

Page 32: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGELIAS Probably unaware of complexity sciences, Elias is

describing here what complexity scientists call self-organisation and emergence

Individuals and groups are interacting with each other, in their local situations, in intentional, planned ways – however, these cannot be foreseen by any of them.

Long-term, population-wide patterns will emerge without an overall plan or blueprint

A trend or direction in the evolution of the consequences of the interweaving of individual plans and intentions – which is self-organisation and emergence

Page 33: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGELIAS No polarisation in intention an emergence In SCT, emergence means either;

Everything happens by chance, or Is such, that it can be designed, conditioned or at

least influenced by powerful effective individuals with intention

Elias suggests that people interacts with intentions but their intentions will differ – indeed, each of these intentions is a response to the intentions of others – and so what happens emerges in the interplay of all their intentions

Page 34: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGELIAS All that everyone can do, no matter how

powerful, can do is to continue participating with intention and continually negotiate and respond to others who are also intentionally doing the same.

It is in this ongoing intentional, local interaction of strategising that the population-wide patterns of strategy emerges

Change occurs in paradoxical transformative processes – change is self-organising, emergent processes of perpetually constructing the future as continuity and potential transformation at the same time

Page 35: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

RESPONSIVE PROCESSES THINKINGELIAS We cannot identify self-organising social order

with the order of nature, or with some kind of supra-individual

The order arises in specific dynamics of social interplay in particular places at particular times

If it makes sense to think of societies and their ‘strategies’ in this way, then there is no reason why we could not think of about organisations in this way too and this is what rest of the chapters will do

What emerges does so precisely because of what all involved do and do not do

Page 36: S TRATEGISK L EDELSE 7. undervisningsgang – 22. oktober 2012

EXERCISE Groups will be formed The human analogues in table 12.2 (p. 319) will

be distributed among the groups and should be explained in class