I grew up in a world of tie-die t-shirts in the 20th century and left school at a time where people didn’t have mobile phones…unless they we’re Yuppy’s (what’s a yuppy? Google it!). We also didn’t generally have email or tablets or even laptops. In this world, Snapchat wasn’t even a twinkle in Facebooks eye and IT Architects were a local Wellington business rather than a job title. But the world was also in the middle of a leap in the use of technology…and here we are now.
This
increase in complexity and technology which has led to a fundamental
shift in how we need to work together better to be successful.
The purpose of sharing this story is to help others also make sense of what underpins new ways of working that are becoming more present; like Agile project management, Human Centred Design, Safety II and Digitisation so we can better connect to the why, what and how and be in action more effectively. This blog is an experment in exploring better ways of working that spark our collective intelligence
Research
shows that with increasing complexity and reliance on technology, we
need to work in ways that maintain, reinforce and build our human
connections. This blog about exploring the new breed of disciplines and
initiatives that spark people’s collective intelligence
The
aim of discovering the spark blog and consultancy is to explore ways
that people manage to thriving, not just surviving in this changing 21st
century working world. I've been interested in the changing nature of
how we work and live together for some time now. I remember getting our
first Commodore 64 computer at home and our first Apple Macs at primary
school and how that changed the way I sat and learnt - or sometimes
just played computer games. Haven't we come along way since then and on
so many different technological and social levels!
The
way we live together and interact in our communities has changed
dramatically since the start of the 19th century. Here is a very simple
review. In 1800 over 70% of the worlds population lived rural and 30%
in urban areas, with even less in metropolitan cities. Now, 200 years
later, up to 80% live in urban areas with a high proportion of those in
metropolitan areas. Only 20% of people now live in the countryside.
This
urban shift, has dramatically changed the way we work together and
organize ourselves and how societies function leading to a number of
developments and revolutions and an increasing speed of change.
1820 - 1840 - Industrial revolution
1877 - 1910 - Communication / Telephone
1880 - 1910 - Transportation / Motor Car
1960 - 1970 - Computer / technology
1970s - Mobile Phone Technology
1980 - 1990 - Network / World Wide Web
1990 - 2000 - Mobile phone use
2000 - 2010 - Mobile computing
As you can see there were a number of technological advancements that have happened through the 20th century. These advancements
have changed the nature of our working environments and our work
situations and the ways we work together and interact with each other.
These
changes that have led to an increased speed and complexity in how we
share information and in doing so, its changed our expectations of one
another and changed the way we interact together. In short it seems to have made the social systems that we work in more complex.
Systems and Complexity
What do I mean by this and what is the difference between simple and complex systems?
The way I might describe it is that Systems thinking is a way of making sense of different situations we work within. What we observe every day and what researchers have confirmed is that different sorts of systems are in motion around us all the time. Systems theory is something that I've become quite interested in and in 2024 did a Masters level research project using a systems theory approach. So ill share my simple ‘every-day’ perspective and you can also click on the picture for a fuller introduction to Systems theory or YouTube other explanations.
What
many of observe every day and what researchers have confirmed is that
different sorts of systems that are going on around us have definable
characteristics and can be grouped into one of four categories.
- Simple systems = easily knowable.
- Complicated systems = not simple, but still knowable.
- Complex = not fully knowable
- Chaotic = neither knowable nor predictable.
What are some real life examples?
A house is complicated
My car is complicated
This blog is complicated
A computer is complicated
Teamwork in a small business is complicated
The biodiesel distillation process is complicated
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My household is complex
City traffic is complex
Our thoughts are complex
The internet is complex
Teamwork in a big business is complex
Customer experience is complex
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A tent is simple
My skateboard is simple
A word is simple
An instruction is simple
Teamwork for a sole trader is simple
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A house fire is chaotic
Cairo city traffic is chaotic
A cybersecurity attack is chaotic
earthquake is chaotic
Teamwork in the national party right now is chaotic
A crisis incident is chaotic
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Insight: The interesting lesson is that as people have increasingly moved closer together into metropolitan cities and technology has advanced its increased the pace of life and changed our expectations and frequency of our social interactions.
For those of us working in organisations, our work and industrial environment is made up of a wide range of interacting systems.
- Functional teams and larger business units
- Customer management system
- Financial management systems
- Health and safety in higher risk operations
- Supplier management system
- Asset management system
- People management approach
- Project management system
The technological and social changes we're living through have led to
our every day working and social systems becoming more complicated or
complex which means that our leadership and management approaches also needs to adapt from what was used in the 20th century. Each of these professional disciplines has its own nuances and uniqueness, but there are also similarities.
Because
the different systems have varying characteristics the ways that people
operate best within them, learn about them and also try to influence
them also changes.
Insight:
Many of our work systems have shifted from being more complicated in the
20th century, to now being more complex. As a result, the way that we need
to work to thrive within the system or to influence it also needs to
change.
Systems
thinking is a way of thinking about overall patterns rather than
specific elements or problems. It helps us find solutions that
simultaneously solve different problems and leverage solutions for the
wider system or organisation.
So what are some of the key characterisics of the different types?
Since
many work situations have evolved from being complicated to complex,
lets explore some key differences and characteristics of complex
systems?
My key insight is that during our day to day activities we all work or lead in mixture of different situations, ranging from simple to complicated, complex and sometimes chaotic. We especially need to be particularly aware of the leadership approaches and management tools that are best suited to either a complicated technical situation or complex situation.
Leadership for Complicated systems
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Leadership for Complex adaptive systems
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Table: Different leadership roles for different systems
As
the tendancy towards complexity continues and as the pace of change
also evolves, as managers, leaders and other 'actors' we need to keep
evolving and adapting the balance of ways that we work with others to
achieve outcomes.
Table 3
Operational level
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Complicated
Systems
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Complex
Systems
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Leadership
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Authoritative, highly rganized leadership
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Servant / Level 5 leadership
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Engineering design
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Human Centred Design
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Risk Assessment
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Analytical
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Social
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System modeling
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Static – point in time
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Dynamic - visual
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Contractual / Procurement
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Supplier contracting
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Alliance Partnership
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Project Methodology
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Waterfall
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Agile
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Event Learning
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Event Investigations
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Learning Teams
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Personal Learning
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Functional coaching
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Transformational Coaching
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This blog is about growing understanding and sharing tools to help NZ people work well together in 21st century. I will touch on innovation, wellbeing, managing risks, health and safety, project management
