1. Introduction
2. How do risks change in
changing times
3. A definition for
resilience in changing times
4. How does a resilience
strategy align with Critical and Crisis Risk Management approaches
5.
How resilience can be embedded into an organization for full effect?
6. How might this look within
an operational risk management approach & system?
Following the initial wave of the 2020
pandemic and national lockdowns that occurred across different countries there
has been a noticeable focus on mental health and on the importance of personal
resilience and resilience development to support people through tough times and
maintain the performance of the organisations greatest resource. Is
personal resilience development for the employees the most effective approach?
My experience working in and alongside teams
and organisations and studying operational performance research have led me to
appreciate that:
1 There is a relationship between
personal resilience and mental wellbeing and team resilience and operational
reliability. Because of this
relationship I would argue that mental health is not just a personal quality
but also a community and social phenomenon.
Social, team and organisationals level factors and processes can have a
significant impact on mental health and the higher level the issue the wider
the impact.
2 Front line workers are actually inherently
resilient even if operational leaders don't realize it. In times of pressure or operational stress,
the people who bear the brunt of it are the front line workers. They need to be resilient whether the other
parts of the organization support them or not because they are on the front
line. When operational systems
breakdown, they are the ones who need to react and adapt and then stay alert to
what is happening to be able to then anticipate the follow on effect and also
what is coming up next. Operational
workers are resilient because they have to be…they don't have a choice.
So if an organizational leader is genuinely
committed to enabling better mental health for its employees then I would argue
that; to have the biggest impact ; organizational resilience will trump
personal resilience every time.
Resilient organisations are also psychologically safe places to
work because it an inherent part of resilience.
So focus on resilience in general if you want to support your people’s
mental health and the wellbeing of your business together in time of change.
To have the greatest impact on resilience,
the way that a team or organizational leader can support them and drive
organizational performance is by taking steps to support their front line
workers by building resilient attitudes, practices and systems back through the
various layers of management and governance.
This not only benefits people throughout the organization and in doing so
it fosters and enables wellbeing, it also enables the organization as a whole to
respond more rapidly and effectively in times of challenge and change.
This paper explores the topic of
Operational Resilience and Reliability – Adaptive capacity and describes how to
build it in practice via an operational policy within an Operational Health and
Safety Management System (OHSMS).
How
do risks change in changing times?
Different risk management methods are needed for different
situations. This is described well by
David Snowdons often referenced Cynefin framework where he describes four risk management
decision-making contexts; or "domains” that help managers to identify how
they perceive situations to make decisions.

They are obvious (or simple), complicated, complex,
chaotic, and with a further space
of disorder at the centre.
These four contexts require leaders to diagnose
situations and identify opportunities and risks and then to act in ways that
are appropriate for that.
The Cynefin model can be applied to all
sorts of different work situations including risk management. Because each context has different characteristics
the risk management approach also needs to change. The fundamental argument that it raises is
that different types of risks or risk factors require different risk management
strategies.
Mental health, as an example, is highly
complex overall so requires quite a different risk management strategy to other
more technical engineering oriented risks.
In a stable industry with predictable risks
or for simple low risk work activities there may be limited need for resilience
oriented approaches to risk management but when things get challenging, complex
or start changing again and again then operational resilience is an important
risk management capacity.
This is particular true if the work
involves hazardous operations and this is also very true for wellbeing oriented
risks like mental health and psychological demands because these are such
complex and ‘intangible’ risks that are dependent on peoples behaviours and
relationships and perceptions.
The table below describes the four
different domains and the most appropriate risk management approach.
|
Obvious
|
The
domain of ‘known knowns’. These are
operational situations and risks characterized by
stability and clear cause-and-effect relationships that are easily
discernible by everyone.
|
General
risk management approaches are applicable
|
|
Complicated
|
The Domain of known unknowns and experts. These are operations and risks that have a
clear relationship between cause and effect, but where not everyone can see
it - so it requires analysis and where the solutions are largely technical.
|
A Critical Risk Management model is highly applicable
|
|
Complex
|
The
domain of emergence and unknown knowns. The
whole situation or risk context is far more or different than the sum of its
parts. In these situations people are often required to use judgment and make
decisions, often without all the information available or where tradeoffs are
required. For these reasons there is
no one-right way to manage risks and the process to find solutions are as
important as the actual solution.
|
Resilience
and ‘adaptive capacity’ oriented risk management approaches are suited
|
|
Chaotic
|
The
Domain of ‘unknown unknowns’ and Rapid Response.
In these crisis or emergency type situations things
are changing so fast so a leaders job is to react and respond to manage the
immediate situation.
|
Crisis
Management Approaches are most appropriate
|
Through a series of ‘Covid-specific’
podcasts, in April 2020, Todd Conklin (a well known Safety podcaster and
industry leader) interviewed Sydney Dekker.
During the podcast he eloquently described resilience within a health
and safety context as the capacity to adapt and as ‘Bouncing Forward’.
In the April podcast Dekker’s basic
argument was that; when risks are impossible to predict, an organisation needs
to have an inbuilt capacity to pay attention to change and then quickly respond
and adapt. He explains how this is
different from the traditional definition of resilience, which is the ability
to absorb change then bounce back to a former state. He explains how this type of resilience isn’t
fully suited because the playing field is changing, so teams and organisations
need to be able to absorb the risks and adapt and change accordingly knowing
that new risks will be continuing to arise.
Dekker further highlights how Traditional
metrics used to identify performance do not help to measure resilience (ability
to keep pace with continual change.) measuring constant / predictable risk
profile (linear) vs. measuring unpredictable profile. There is limited value in
reporting on the risks because they are constantly changing. Instead it is more
important to assess the underlying ability to manage new risks.
Supporting this approach from a leadership
perspective Snowdon identifies leadership characteristics that that are best
suited to complex situations which can not be fully understood through analysis
and logic (Reference Y). He outlines how to be most effective leaders
should…
·
Probe first, then sense, and then respond
·
Conducts experiments that are safe to fail
·
Patiently allow paths forward to reveal themselves
·
Set the stage, step
back a bit, allow patterns to emerge, determine which ones are desirable to continue with
·
Set outcomes and give teams and team members the freedom to
work with users to come up with the solutions themselves
·
For more information refer to
Reference (Y):
Understanding
Resilience
There is a military saying
that no battle plan survives more than five minutes after engagement with the
enemy.
Organizational
resilience can be described as a commitment to support workers in managing
complex risk situations by fostering the capacity of the organization to adapt
at all levels - team, management and organizational. There are different definitions for
resilience depending on the nature of the situation. This article will focus on the current
operating environment, which is very unpredictable at an international level
due to the 2020 Pandemic.
“the
ability of an organistion to manage unpredictable risks and risk factors
(associated with complexity and change) by learning and adapting at all
operational levels (personal, team, organisational) to effectively ‘bounce
forward’ into new ways of working and being organized”
Having an
explicitly resilience and reliability approach that sits along the Critical
risk and Crisis management approaches acknowledges that sometimes operational
contexts are complex and uncertain (situations, environments, risks, risk
factors, scale or human biases or because the system simply wasn’t working as
planned at that time. Because of these
factors risks cannot be predicted and so need to be managed in a different way
to critical controls. Being resilient is
driven by leadership and includes having a just culture where leaders make
decisions fairly following errors and events, but it is more than that as
well.
A
Model from Resilience Engineering
There is a lot of current research and focus into the topic
of resilience in general because it relates to some very important issues of our
time including climate change and management of social issues like
inequality. There are also a number of
different academic disciplines and philosophy’s that research resilience,
wellbeing and related topics within organistions. High Reliability Organisational Theory,
Psychological Safety and Resilience Engineering. As this is a short article we will just
explore one or two approaches.
Resilience Engineering is one such safety research discipline
that studies safety in organisations. It
is championed by Dr Eric Holnagel and Dr David Woods
who have conducted research into resilient organistions.
Rather than studying different ‘critical risks’ independently
the resilience engineering approach is to ask what makes an organistion
resilient in general and so able to effectively manage any critical risk and identifies
technical methods to build resilience into their work practices.
Resilience engineering research has identified
four capacities that resilient organisations have embedded within their
operational practices. These are
capacities to anticipate, monitor, learn, and to respond and adapt to change:
|
Anticipate
|
The capacity and skills to anticipate threats and opportunities
and the space to do it. This involves going beyond risk analysis to
imagine what might happen to deal with the irregular and unexpected events
not yet on the horizon
|
|
Monitor
|
There is capacity to monitor their internal and external
environment in a flexible way to identify what else could be critical in the
near future. They then adjust responses in a flexible way to
unexpected demands.
|
|
Respond / Adapt
|
They have ways for teams and team members to learn from experience
which requires actual events from both what goes well and what goes wrong
|
|
Learn
|
Ways to enable teams and team members to proactively engage in
learning from experience of actual events from both what goes well and what
goes wrong without the need for formal processes
|
How
does a resilience strategy align with Critical and Crisis Risk Management approaches
Snowdons
Cynefin framework introduced earlier in the article describes the nature of
different situations (or contexts) including the difference between those that
are complicated and complex.
Critical
control programmes are highly suited to complicated situations. This is because they focus primarily on managing
individual ‘critical risks’
independently and through analysis and in a structured and planned way. Critical risks are identified and singled
out then the separate risk scenarios are broken down into separate risk
scenarios and critical points, which can be managed via critical controls to prevent
harm. As a result controls always tend
to be focused on the front line because that is where analysis shows the
critical points to be.
Having general
and critical risk management programmes is a way for an organisation to set itself
up to manage risks that can be foreseen.
But the approach has limitations.
In the task of driving, some good examples of critical controls include
seat belts and ABS brakes. These are
vital and important part of the risk management puzzle but in the real
operational world it does not fully ensure an operator is always able to drive
safely & well. There are some things
that occur that cannot be predicted and managed via these controls.
A different
approach again is required to managing a crisis because of the differing nature
of the situation. A crisis is so
unpredictable and happens so fast that every action and decision is to address
an urgent need. This is why a crisis
management plan seeks to manage risks in a different way with exercises and
very dynamic response structures and processes.
There will be
times outside of a crisis where everybody has to juggle multiple risks that
actually have competing priorities or where, even outside of a crisis, they
have to make decisions about moving forward even though critical controls are
not in place. This is what Snowdon
describes as the ‘complex’ domain and is
quite common in workplaces.
These complex
situations require people to have an ability to self-monitor and anticipate,
creatively adapt, learn and share across multiple team levels. In these situations the front line workers
will adapt not matter what because they need to. Workers
are resilient… they don't have a choice.
Far greater
benefit comes of these capacities are also exist within the way that
operational teams interact and work together and within the management and
functional teams that support them. Even
up to the organistions governance processes and established leadership
practices themselves.
Case
Study
An example, from High Reliability
Organistions (HRO) research of a healthcare organization with a mature approach
to resilience and reliability, and how operational teams can function.
High
Reliability Organization (HROs) are anomalies. They
exist in the kind of very complex, fast-evolving environments where you would
expect chaos to prevail. But it doesn’t. HROs are able to cope successfully
with unexpected conditions.
Example
from HRO Healthcare organisations
·
Supporting frontline caregivers freedom to choose how to do work
without needing to follow orders.
·
Giving frontline nurses the flexibility and support to derive care
plans by problem solving (many different solution to care) independent of
policy. They know that the complexity of
individual situations means the individual front line workers need the ability
to make judgments based on their professional experience and the situation in
front of them.
·
HRO research also shows how successful adapters
do goal directed team formation by building teams around problems solving
rather than job title.
·
Actively promote avoiding naming, shaming
& blaming to share and learn from their errors
·
Frontline workers have freedom to try specific interventions for
particular patient needs (there are no mistakes, just learning)
·
Front line teams are supported with a clinical specialist always
available within 20mins if needed and where errors are promoted as teaching
opportunities so that they can be addressed and fixed more quickly.
Key Operating Principles Identified within
High Reliability Organizations (HROs)
·
Deference to front line
Expertise
·
Preoccupation with Failure
(emergence)
·
Reluctance to Simplify (Whole
of system thinking)
·
Sensitivity to Operations
·
Commitment to Resiliency (learn
from error and adapt with new capacity)
QUESTION: If your organistion has a critical control
programme. Look at the one that are
highly dependent on people or the local context of an operational site and ask
yourself; how adaptable and resilient are these controls?
How can resilience be embedded within an
organization for fuller effect?
Resilience
can occur at all different levels and every organisation can have pockets of
resilience. But for an organisation to
be highly resilient and reliable and able to fully
support operational teams to carry out hazardous operations safely and in a way
that fosters and sustains wellbeing, its important to establish principles and embedded practices to anticipate, monitor, learn and adapt (adaptive capacity) at all
levels.
Critical risk management approaches focus primarily on
front-line controls. Conversely, Elinor
Ostram said that if the nature of systems that are being governed (regulating)
are complex, it is essential that there is also complexity in the governance
systems. W Ross Ashby (Design for a
Brain: The origin of Adaptive Behaviour (1960) described the “Law of Requisite
Variety”, that any regulative system need as much variety in the actions that
it can take as exists in the system it is regulating.
CASE
STUDY:
In 2019 a colleague of mine explained how
impressed he was with an operational team that ran a bulk storage depot and the
way they ran their monthly safety meetings. Unlike most safety meetings
the team did not sit around together in the meeting room with an agenda.
Instead he described how they walked around their site exploring it and
pointing out different ‘unexpected’ scenarios that could happen and then
considering what that may then lead to and how they would manage the cascading
effects. They were obsessed with failure in a really positive way that
enabled them to be very prepared.
Psychological Demands - a
risk specific example
The
characteristics of Psychological Demands-Wellbeing as a workplace risk include:
-
That
it has a large and varied set of risk factors covering all aspects of the
work (the workplace, the work, the
workers)
-
All
levels of management influence and are influenced by each other
-
There
are a mixture of work related and personal risk factors
-
The
system is open
-
Issues
are highly contextual. They can only be
fully understood with local knowledge
-
Outcomes
are unpredictable.
o A stressful event like a client
committing suicide can have an entirely different impact on one person (a
manageable challenge) vs. another (overwhelming emotions requiring time off
work).
o Expectations following
announcement of Covid level 4 in NZ was that a large percentage of staff would
be impacted mentally and require support.
o Events that are a daily occurrence
in one part of the system (e.g. threats and abuse in Custodial) would be
potentially destabilizing in another.
-
The
relationship between the different factors and system parts can be as important
as the factors themselves (e.g. the relationship between people or between job
demands & job control)
Why now? – The Current Context as a Driver for a developing resilience
The pandemic
is a real-life example of how different risk management strategies are needed
for different operational situations and needs. The events of the last 5 months following the Covid outbreak have
put on the spotlight on the H&S risk management capabilities of
organisations around the world and particularly their abilities to respond
initially to the pandemic Crisis, the strength of their critical controls
programmes and also the ongoing capacity of their front line teams to adapt to
changing circumstances or when critical controls programmes weren’t able to be
implemented as planned.
Another consideration is the idea that new
safety and wellbeing are more suited to organisations with more mature
approaches to health and safety and where the critical risk management
fundamentals are already in place and where they are ready to be innovative. An alternative to this is the idea that it is
a risk management capability that is actually needed while a Critical Risk
Management capability is being established and implemented. A critical risk management system will never
be working perfectly and the context is always changing then the capacity for
adaptation and resilience will support teams to better manage the unpredicted
risks.
HOW
So where
to start? As an organizational leader
wanting to build resilience, you should probably focus your efforts at the
levels that you can have the most influence and impact.
|
Team
members
|
Front
line operators have no option but to be resilient. An organization can provide support and
encouragement but cannot directly control this level.
|
|
Leadership
|
Alongside the functional changes that can
be implemented to provide capacity to adapt within an organistional system,
leaders at all levels can adopt leadership practices that are best suited to
complex situations that can not be fully understood through analysis and
logic (Reference Y):
· Probe first,
then sense, and then respond
· Conducts experiments
that are safe to fail
· Patiently allow
paths forward to reveal themselves
· Set the stage, step back a bit, allow patterns to emerge,
determine which ones are desirable to continue with
· Set outcomes and
give teams and team members the freedom to work with users to come up with
the solutions themselves
· For more information refer to Reference (Y):
|
|
Operational
teams
|
How a team functions will provide a layer
of capacity to adapt (resilience) during times of challenge and change.
Consider how your team currently
functions and ask: in what ways do our team level practices and processes
along with our collective attitudes enable team members to:
-
Monitor variable conditions
across the team?
-
Anticipate potential risks on
the horizon?
-
Continually learn from each
other?
-
Quickly and effectively adapt
as needed?
What else could you starts, stop or do
more or less of?
Other examples of supports
-
Just decision guides
-
Ability to establish agile
front line teams around work projects rather than job titles
-
Time within schedules for
regular monitoring and learning initiatives
-
Ways to learn collaboratively
from failure and success (e.g. Learning teams, reflective practice,
retrospectives)
|
|
Regional
and business unit management
|
In additional team level capacity, larger
organisations will have regional and business unit middle management groups that
are the conduits both up and down the organization so for an organization to
be highly resilient they also need capacity within their practices, processes
and activities to be able to anticipate and monitor the variable conditions
to learn and adapt.
Consider things like:
-
Pre & Post job
debriefs.
-
Time within schedules for
regular monitoring and learning initiatives between teams and operational
levels.
-
Forward focused scenario
planning
-
Human Centered Design and
other proactive learning initiatives
-
Agile Project Management
|
|
Safety,
Health and Wellbeing team and other organizational support functions (e.g.
Safety and Wellbeing team)
|
To build resilience into safety systems
and initiatives, the safety and wellbeing team needs methods to design and
implement or update systems and initiatives that have a corresponding
resilience and adaptive capacity.
For example for work on complex
operational processes that involve where people play a big role, then instead
of traditional engineering and waterfall approaches consider
-
Human Centered Design (or
User Experience) methods
-
Agile project management
methods
Human-centered design (HCD) is a term product creators use to
describe a process of designing for people. HCD develops solutions to problems by involving the
human perspective in all steps of the problem-solving process.
Principles
· Co-design
· Focus
upon the people (identify the real goal of real users)
· Find
the right problem
· Think
of everything as a whole system
· Always
test your design decisions (experiment)
Agile
Project Management (REF Tihi App)
Agile
Project Management (APM) is an iterative approach to planning and guiding project
processes for complex and unpredictable.
Values
· User / Customer Collaboration Over Contract Negotiation
· Individuals and Interactions Over Processes and Tools
· Working Products Over Comprehensive Documentation
· Responding to Change Over Following a Plan
Example Practices include - Scrum teams; Sprint Cycles; Kanban
|
|
Governance
and senior leadership
|
To maintain resilience at the highest
level, any governance (regulation) system designed to regulate a complex organization
or large team must have as much variety in the actions it can take as there
exists in the systems being regulated. (X)
Elinor Ostram describes how the most effective systems
of governance for complex situations will be deep and nested and have the
following characteristics:
1 They are multi-tiered
2 They provide the necessary information for decision making at
each level
3 Risk management rules protect workers rather than punish them? (Quasi-voluntary compliance - Margaret
Levi 1988)
4 They deal with conflict well
5 They drive a just culture where self-regulation occurs and is
undertaken primarily by the participants themselves
6 Provide physical, technical, and institutional infrastructure
7 Encourage adaptation and change
Resilience
Performance measurement
· There is limited value in reporting on the risks because they are
constantly changing?
· Instead it is more important to assess the underlying ability to
manage new risks?
· How well are teams and other groups keeping pace with continual
change?
|
References
2. Scales, Polycentricity, and
Incentives: Designing Complexity to Govern Complexity. By Elinor Ostrom
3. Pre-accident Podcast 249 - Todd Conklin
4. Four
Concepts for Resilience and the implications for the future of Resilience
Engineering DavidD.Woods
1 comment:
Great Article Chris
Especially liked the concept of bouncing forward through Covid-19. Taking the opportunity to not only bounce back but achieve even greater things as a result of Covid-19. Appeals to the opportunist in me.
Thanks for sharing Terry
Head of Health & Wellbeing - Fonterra
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